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STATE OF THE SCHOOL REPORT 2010-11 01 University of Pennsylvania School of Arts & Sciences STATE OF THE SCHOOL REPORT 2010-11

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The annual report of the University of Pennsylvania School of Arts & Sciences

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Page 1: STATE OF THE SCHOOL REPORT 2010-11

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University of pennsylvania School of Arts & Sciences

State of the

School report 2010-11

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MeSSage froM the Dean 2

Shaping MinDS Undergrads in the Lab Classroom Knowledge Meets Real- World Experience in Washington The College in Brief Innovation in Education The Next Generation of Scholars: Accomplishment Across Disciplines Exploring Frontiers of Space, Time and Culture Graduate Education in the Arts and Sciences Learning for the Long Run: Professional and Continuing Education Math Synergies Preparing for Action Professional and Continuing Education in Brief 10

UnDerStanDing, engaging anD changing Science Transcending Fiction The Art and Science of Sustainability Understanding Upheaval Seeking Solutions Strength in Asia Perspectives on Our Culture

University of Pennsylvania School of Arts & SciencesState of the School RepoRt 2010-11

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fUlfilling the proMiSe: artS anD ScienceS alUMni accoMpliShMent A Day in the Life of an English Major Great Expectations Educational Attainment of Young Alumni Alumni Nobels: A Legacy Continues 22

fiScal Year 2011 24

SUpporting the School of artS anD ScienceS Campaign Update: Making History in the Arts and Sciences Making History, Transforming the Campus 28

SUpporterS of the School of artS anD ScienceS 40

BoarD of overSeerS 41

School of artS anD ScienceS aDMiniStration

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Rebecca Bushnell Dean, School of Arts and Sciences Thomas S. Gates, Jr. Professor Professor of English

MeSSage froM the Dean

The past year marked a turning point for the School of Arts and Sciences. We celebrated a number of important milestones, among them the renovation of

the undergraduate Chemistry labs, a facilities project that has sparked a transformation of the chemistry curriculum. The expanded Music Building completed its first full year of operation and continued to win recognition for its design, including designation as Penn’s first LEED Gold academic building. A gift from alumnus James Joo-Jin Kim, W’59, G’61, Gr’63, is ushering our Korean Studies program into a new era—one in which an understanding and appreciation of Korea is woven into the fabric of Penn’s academic life.

Our past year’s accomplishments also attest to SAS’s position at the heart of Penn. Among our cross-school milestones are the shared appointment of two new Penn Integrates Knowledge professors in SAS and Wharton: I. George Heyman University Professor Barbara Mellers, a globally recognized expert on judgment and decision-making, and Leonore Annenberg University Professor Philip Tetlock, an award-winning scholar of political psychology and organizational behavior. The groundbreaking for the Krishna P. Singh Center for Nanotechnology represents a joint accomplishment of SAS and the School of Engineering and Applied Science. And our long-time friend and supporter P. Roy Vagelos, C’50, Hon’99, and his wife, Diana, parents, recently made a gift that is making it possible for SAS and SEAS to launch the dual-degree undergraduate Vagelos Integrated Program in Energy Research.

We celebrate these major accomplishments, many of which are highlighted in the pages that follow. But in my mind what made the past year a true turning point for the School is the story that lies behind these milestones. We have by and large met the extraordinary challenges presented by the nation’s economy and have emerged stronger than ever. Colleagues from across the School have worked creatively to address the never-ending imperative to focus on our core priorities, while the School is not growing. With stability, collaboration, strategic investment, accountability, and innovation as our watchwords, we have charted a path to sustained accomplishment in education and the advancement of knowledge.

In the past year we achieved stability with respect to two critical resources: our finances and our faculty. Through close management of our expenses and the achievement of results that met or exceeded our goals for key revenue categories, we have closed FY 2011 in a position of financial strength. This strong performance has allowed us to build reserves that will give us the capacity to respond to unexpected events and to invest strategically in key new initiatives.

In an era of resource constraints, I take special pride in all we have done to ensure the strength of our faculty. Our reputation for excellence in

research and education—and intellectual excellence across Penn—relies substantially upon our ability to recruit and retain the very best faculty. I am delighted that we have recruited nine outstanding scholars who joined us in September: they include specialists in India and China, areas of knowledge critical to our future. I am even more proud of our successes in retaining many of our outstanding faculty who were being recruited by other schools. This is a testament to what I have long believed: that the School of Arts and Sciences is a place where the best teacher-scholars choose to stay and to make their careers.

The stability that the School has achieved reflects our institutional commitment to collaboration and strategic investment. By taking the time to develop shared academic goals across departments, we can devote resources to areas with maximum impact across the School. Our natural science departments are ready to engage in a new approach to faculty searches, targeting critical new research areas that cross disciplinary boundaries. Through this approach, our Mathematics and Biology departments may, for example, jointly identify a computational biologist who can advance intellectual agendas in both departments. This approach has long been a part of our institutional DNA: the difference is we are now formalizing processes to support such collaborative thinking.

To ensure excellence without growth, accountability is also vital. This ethic has been reflected in the past year through a charge to all of our undergraduate programs to define specific goals for their majors, specifying the knowledge and skills that their graduates should obtain. The next step is to see how the curriculum and course offerings ensure that students receive an education that supports the defined goals. A similar initiative is underway in the faculty committees overseeing the various components of the College’s general education curriculum. The faculty also engaged in three-year curriculum planning, to make sure that we consistently deliver the courses our students need. We thus never stop making sure that our students are getting the very best possible education, while we also mind the budget.

Finally, we continue to find ways to improve through innovation. The College’s just-launched Integrated Studies Program—which provides a new path for highly motivated, talented freshmen to explore the broad territory of the arts and sciences—is a wonderful example of our commitment to exploring novel approaches to education. This innovative spirit inspires all that we do. While we can never assume that hard times are behind us, we have shown that we can always get better at the things that count—even in more challenging times. I take great pride in the hard work and impressive accomplishments of the SAS community and I hope you will enjoy this overview of highlights from the past year.

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Shaping MinDS

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he School of arts and Sciences is home to roughly half of penn’s undergraduate, graduate and professional student body. Through a wide range of courses and majors, the College provides essential instruction in the liberal arts to all of the University’s undergraduates, who leave Penn with the knowledge, skills and inclination to contribute to and thrive in a rapidly changing world. In the Graduate Division, our doctoral programs develop the scholars who will lead the pursuit of knowledge in the next generation and maintain Penn’s stature as a world-class research university. The Professional and Continuing Education division extends a Penn Arts and Sciences education to a broad range of lifelong learners including non-traditional undergraduates and working professionals. To all of our exceptional students, the School of Arts and Sciences offers learning experiences that shape minds for independent, creative thinking; leadership in their chosen fields; and thoughtful, engaged citizenship within their community, nation and world.

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The undergraduate experience at the College is notable for many things: a broad range of academic options, opportunities for interdisciplinary study, flexibility, and strong advising. The abundant opportunities to expand learning outside of the classroom, to engage in active research programs, and to be mentored by world-class scholars make undergraduate study at Penn Arts and Sciences truly distinctive.

Michael Sulewski, C’11, worked with a team of scientists in the lab of Brush Family Professor of Biology Ted Abel on cutting-edge research that explores how to increase gene activity central to long-term memory formation—research that ultimately may help to identify treatments for psychiatric, neurological and neurodegenerative disorders. A Biological Basis of Behavior major, Sulewski first became involved with Professor Abel’s group as a sophomore and eventually had the opportunity to co-author a paper published in Nature Neuroscience.

Now a first-year student at Penn’s Perelman School of Medicine, Sulewski summarizes the impact of his experiences in the lab as “pretty eye-opening. You can work on something for weeks or months, and it sometimes just doesn’t work at all…. And when things do work, when you realize you have touched on new knowledge, something no one else has done before, it’s incredibly rewarding.”

Psychology and linguistics major Rachel Romeo, C’11, has a similar story to tell of the transformative impact of engagement in research. A class in American Sign Language and her research assistant job at Penn’s Infant Language Center inspired her to think about the problem of language acquisition in children with hearing impairments. Her advisor, Associate Professor of Psychology and Infant Language Center director Daniel Swingley, helped her design a study to assess whether chronic ear infections can disrupt language learning during the critical first months of life, and if those disruptions have prolonged effects.

Romeo’s path to finding her passion was paved by her advisor, by access to resources like the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, by the scholarship she received that made it possible to attend Penn and by funding received by the University’s Center for Undergraduate Research and Fellowships. But she also credits her liberal arts experience for giving her the freedom to explore. “I started out thinking I’d be a math major and I had never even heard of linguistics,” she says. “I now want to pursue an academic research career devoted to helping eliminate childhood language disorders.”

“ When you realize you have touched on new knowledge, something no one else has done before, it’s incredibly rewarding.”

Michael Sulewski, C’11Biological Basis of Behavior

UnDergraDS in the laB

ShaPinG MindS

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the college in Brief: 2010 – 2011

6,420Total number of students

as of Fall 2011

13%Increase in minority students, Class of 2014 to class of 2015

55+ individuAlized mAjorS

Number of majors offered

68Number of minors

40%

Percentage of students receiving financial aid

$36,377Average financial aid award

$66 million

Total size of SAS financial aid bill

1,503Number of students

2136Average SATs

The Class of 2014

The Class of 2015

1,520Number of students

2141Average SATs

Deirdre Martinez joined the School’s Fels Institute of Government in 2005 with an extensive list of contacts in Washington, D.C. and a desire to use them to place 25 students in summer internships. That first summer, she placed 50 students. Today the Penn in Washington program, housed at Fels and serving the College body, serves 150 students over the summer and approximately 500 students in a variety of programs over the course of the year.

The program helps students find Washington internships, connects them with alumni, and runs a variety of networking events. Dr. Martinez finds that it has been “especially rewarding to see the first students who I helped find internships years ago at our events as alumni who are succeeding in Washington and are excited about helping current students find their way. That encourages me to continue making the program even better.” Martinez, the program director and a doctoral alumna of Penn’s Graduate School of Education, is also a lecturer at Fels and the author of three books including Washington Internships: How to Get Them and Use Them to Launch Your Public Policy Career.

claSSrooM knowleDge MeetS real-worlD experience in waShington

“ Participating in the program and interning at the American Enterprise Institute provided me with a wonderfully robust sense of empowerment, as I witnessed the convergence of theory and practice. It was a remarkable opportunity for me to glimpse briefly beyond college, and into my potential career.”

Courtney Albini, C’13Majors: Political Science and HistoryPenn in Washington Program participant, Summer 2011

“ Participating in the events, I feel incredibly proud to be part of the Penn community, to be among such promising students and accomplished fellow alums.”

Audrey Chang, C’92Senior Vice President, The Harbour Group and alumni mentor, Penn in Washington Program

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the next generation of ScholarS: accoMpliShMent acroSS DiSciplineS

The School’s doctoral programs attract talented scholars from around the world who seek to work closely with our distinguished faculty as they learn their disciplines, learn to teach, and prepare to become the intellectual leaders of the next generation. Through their courses, teaching experiences and research pursuits, students in the School of Arts and Sciences Graduate Division engage with their world and expand the boundaries of knowledge across disciplines.

ShaPinG MindS

innovation in eDUcation

The goal of supporting students along the path to becoming an educated person is not new, but to deliver the most engaging, relevant education the College is committed to innovation. Beginning with the Class of 2015, the College’s Integrated Studies Program (ISP) is offering a unique liberal arts experience for College students in Penn’s Benjamin Franklin Scholars program. The ISP curriculum is designed to survey the broad territory of the arts and sciences, beginning with two innovative freshman courses organized around the great ideas that continue to drive our understanding of the world and the human place in it. A residentially based program, ISP also includes weekly course discussions on broad-ranging topics within Riepe College House, where all the freshmen ISP scholars are housed.

The College’s leadership in innovative, interdisciplinary undergraduate education has most recently been advanced through a major gift from longtime SAS supporters P. Roy, C’50, Hon’99, and Diana Vagelos, parents, to establish the Vagelos Integrated Program in Energy Research. The goal of the new dual-degree program—involving SAS and the School of Engineering and Applied Science—is to prepare top students with an interest in energy science and technology to become leaders in the field. It is expected that graduates of the program will pursue advanced degrees in energy science and engineering.

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SAS doctoral students have made headlines across disciplines in the past year. Eric Trager’s fieldwork brought him to the center of the turbulent Arab spring. Trager, a doctoral student in Political Science, is the Ira Weiner Fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy and an associate scholar at the Foreign Policy Research Institute. Last spring, Trager was in Cairo for a project focusing on Egyptian opposition parties when the anti-Mubarak revolts broke out. Since then Trager has provided commentary and analysis regarding the situation in Egypt on campus as well as for The New Republic, The Atlantic, Foreign Affairs and numerous radio programs.

Art and Archaeology of the Mediterranean World graduate student Margaret M. Andrews demonstrated Penn’s consistent strength in the humanities when she became the winner of the 2011-2012 Rome Prize from the American Academy in Rome. This is the fourth consecutive year in which an SAS student has won the prize—one of the most competitive in the humanities. Andrews’ research involves the physical and social evolution of the ancient Subura in Rome and examines how the topographical development of the region both shaped and was shaped by social, political and economic dynamics.

Also among SAS’s emerging academic stars is Physics and Astronomy graduate student Amitai Bin-Nun. In collaboration with Assistant Professor Justin Khoury and Professor Ravi K. Sheth, Bin-Nun has been exploring how the enormous gravitational force of a black hole can distort the light from objects around it. His work on a technique for measuring this bending of light—called gravitational lensing—has already been published, and he has further proposed that gravitational lensing around a supermassive black hole that is believed to lie at the center of the Milky Way might provide a way to search for extra dimensions.

exploring frontierS of Space, tiMe anD cUltUre

graDUate eDUcation in the artS & ScienceS

31Number of graduate groups

196Doctoral degrees conferred

2010-2011

5,734Number of applicants for

Fall 2011 admission to doctoral programs

214Number of students

matriculating in Fall 2011

$23,000 + summer fellowship

Typical graduate stipend

8Number of professional

master’s programs

967Total enrollment in

professional master’s programs

Cou

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Tra

ger “ On January 25, I

witnessed something amazing: for the first time ever the activists were joined on the streets by ordinary people. This is when the protests became a revolt…. In Egypt’s revolution, the difference makers were ordinary people”

From “Egypt’s Leaderless Revolt: A View from the Ground,” a 60-Second Lecture delivered by Political Science graduate student Eric Trager during Penn’s 2011 Alumni Weekend.

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The School of Arts and Sciences’ professional and continuing education programs provide a point of access for “non-traditional” students. Through options ranging from a part-time undergraduate program, to post-baccalaureate programs that prepare students for graduate study, to language programs that help international students achieve proficiency in their English communication skills, to master’s degree programs that advance skills and knowledge for a range of professionals, the School’s PCE programs meet the ongoing education needs of today’s working population.

learning for the long rUn: profeSSional anD continUing eDUcation

ShaPinG MindS

The best tools are the ones that can do more than one job: in its efforts to meet the needs of non-traditional students, the School’s division of Professional and Continuing Education often comes up with tools that improve teaching and learning across SAS. The Arts and Sciences Learning Commons is one such tool. Originally developed to provide non-traditional students with a robust online course platform, the Commons is now used increasingly as a supplement to regular College courses.

A newer “tool” is Math 101. The course has long been available for PCE students who need additional math preparation—students who have been away from school for several years, or who come from school systems where math instruction tops out with algebra, or who for any other reason are not ready for calculus. Through close collaboration involving PCE staff, Professor and Chair of Mathematics Jerry Kazdan, and advising staff from the College of Arts and Sciences, a new version of Math 101 has been launched that takes advantage of the Learning Commons platform. Online delivery means that students can get the math preparation they need without coming to campus. It does not, however, sacrifice faculty contact: weekly live sessions with the instructor are supported by the software and built into the course.

In addition to benefiting PCE’s part-time undergraduates, Math 101 is an attractive option for newly admitted students to the College of Arts and Sciences who need the additional preparation. Students can take it in the summer and arrive on campus fully prepared for regular Math courses. Math 101 also offers promise as a tool to increase college readiness among Philadelphia high school students, who have the option to take this and other PCE classes for free.

Math SYnergieSG

rego

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profeSSional anD continUing eDUcation in Brief

3,140Overall enrollment

( for-credit programs)

35Average age of LPS

undergraduate student

2,364Overall enrollment

(non-credit programs)

59Number of majors offered to

PCE undergraduates

8Number of merit

scholarships available to part-time students

4.65%

Increase in applications received since 2009-10

According to the World Health Organization, one in eight people in the world lack safe drinking water. From their estimates, almost 5,000 children die each day from water-related illness. Nevertheless, Vivian Futran notes that, “When people think of the greatest threats to humanity, water doesn’t usually enter their minds.”

Futran is a 2011 graduate of SAS’s Master of Environmental Studies program—a program that allowed her to combine her concern for environmental issues, particularly world water supply, with her commitment to a career in policy. While an MES student, Futran also worked as a program manager for the Philadelphia Global Water Initiative, a role that engaged her in sustainability events and activities extending from the Penn campus to the United Nations. Through fellowship support from Penn’s Middle East Center, she also spent a summer in Israel studying Hebrew and expanding her engagement in environmental action abroad. Today, Futran is pursuing her Ph.D . in the environmental field at Israel’s Ben Gurion University.

preparing for action

“ When people think of the greatest threats to humanity, water doesn’t usually enter their minds.”

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UnDerStanDing,engaginganD changing

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he School of arts and Sciences is committed to recruiting and retaining the finest faculty: scholars who not only excel in teaching but who also fuel development of knowledge at and across the boundaries of traditional disciplines. These faculty work in libraries and archives, laboratories and in the field to make connections and discoveries that expand our understanding of the world; they engage with communities to seek ways to apply knowledge to today’s most pressing issues; and they provide the foundation for changes that improve people’s lives.

The following highlights of the activities of our faculty and their student collaborators from 2010-2011 suggest the breadth and impact of the research enterprise at SAS.

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Breakthroughs in nanomaterials are providing a glimpse of an exciting new era. Professor of Physics and Astronomy A.T. Charlie Johnson led a team in the development of a consistent and cost-effective method for making graphene, the atomic-scale material that has promising applications in a variety of fields and was the subject of the 2010 Nobel Prize in Physics. The high-quality graphene that Johnson’s team created was just a single atom thick over 95 percent of its area—and they were able to produce it using readily available materials and manufacturing processes that can be scaled up to industrial levels.

Associate Professor of Physics and Astronomy Marija Drndic and her team are making great strides in biological applications of nanomaterials. Using state-of-the-art nanopores developed in her lab, Drndic and her associates have been able to isolate a specific type of microRNA from cells—a major finding because, although microRNA has a potentially important therapeutic role, detecting these biomolecules has, until now, been difficult. This work is demonstrating the great potential of her lab’s nanopores for use in a range of biophysical applications.

In brain and behavior research, investigators like Assistant Professor of Psychology Joseph Kable are using imaging techniques to develop an increasingly refined sense of how the brain makes us who we are. Kable, who specializes in the neurological and psychological processes involved in decision making, recently published findings confirming the specific region of the brain necessary for making decisions about economic value.

Richard Perry University Professor Adrian Raine uses the techniques of neuroscience to explore causes of crime. His research has identified differences in the brain structures of psychopaths and in studies spanning over 20 years he has also found a correlation between a lack of conditioning to fear punishment as a toddler and criminal behavior as an adult. The implications of this work were highlighted in a newsmaking panel discussion at last year’s meeting of the American Academy for the Advancement of Science.

Science tranScenDing fiction

UndERSTandinG, EnGaGinG and ChanGinG

Martha Farah, Walter H. Annenberg Professor of Natural Sciences in the Department of Psychology and Director of Penn’s Center for Neuroscience and Society, contributed to the debate on the use of medications such as Adderall and Ritalin—so-called “smart drugs”—to enhance focus and memory in people with no medical diagnosis. Farah and her colleagues found that subjects believed they performed better on various cognitive tasks when given Adderall, but that their performance was in fact no better than when they were given placebos.

Ideas that just a few years ago were being explored primarily by storytellers in movies and genre writing are now being translated into new scientific knowledge by investigators across the natural and physical sciences at SAS.

John

Car

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A.T. Charlie johnson

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the art anD Science of SUStainaBilitY

In June 2011, an international research team led by Associate Professor of Earth and Environmental Science and director of the Sea Level Research Laboratory Benjamin Horton reported that the rate of sea-level rise along the U.S. Atlantic coast is greater now than at any time in the past 2,000 years. In addition they found a consistent link between changes in global mean surface temperature and sea level.

This past summer more than a dozen students, faculty and staff from the Department of Biology worked in Northern Mongolia as part of an international initiative to document the combined ecological and evolutionary consequences of global climate change and grazing pressures there. The program, headed by professors Peter Petraitis and Brenda Casper, is a collaboration between Penn, the Academy of Natural Sciences in Philadelphia, and several institutions in Mongolia. Because of its latitude, elevation, and distance from the moderating influence of a large body of water, Mongolia is expected to experience some of the world’s largest temperature increases in coming years.

Arthur Hobson Quinn Professor of Anthropology Gregory Urban has written about how the goals of a culture contribute to the problem of global warming, noting that if climate change is fueled by a cultural orientation toward material wealth acquisition, then a shift in this dominant goal can contribute to the solution. His argument reflects his ongoing research on American and European corporations and concepts of corporate citizenship.

Professor of Chemistry Andrew Rappe and his colleagues are working to develop new methods and materials to facilitate solar energy harvesting and conversion to chemical fuels. Rappe is also co-director of Pennergy: the Penn Center for Energy Innovation, a cross-school center that seeks to bring together world-class researchers to solve scientific and technological problems enabling the efficient use of current energy sources, the practical use of more sustainable energy, and conversion of energy to different forms. 

SAS faculty are contributing to the sustainability dialogue through multiple paths of inquiry, from work that documents the impact of global warming to exploration of solutions to environmental problems.

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UndERSTandinG, EnGaGinG and ChanGinG

UnDerStanDing Upheaval

While the mass Egyptian protests took much of the world by surprise, Associate Professor of History Eve Troutt Powell helped to frame those events in the context of decades of grievances against the Mubarak regime, including economic stagnation and human rights abuses. A cultural historian who specializes in the modern Middle East, Troutt Powell is the author of A Different Shade of Colonialism: Egypt, Great Britain and the Mastery of the Sudan. Her doctoral advisee Marie Grace Brown has been researching the role of women in the Sudanese nation-building process and has commented on the new government of Southern Sudan and the challenges that exist for women in this new country.

In Political Science, doctoral student Eric Trager has been a leading observer on the developments in Egypt (see p. 7). In addition Ian Lustick, Bess W. Heyman Professor of Political Science, has been a frequent commentator in the media on developments in Syria as well as on Mubarak’s fall. An expert in comparative, international and Middle Eastern politics, Lustick’s ongoing research includes work on computer-assisted modeling for the social sciences, with particular application to the problem of political violence.

A more literary consideration of Arab life came from Firoozeh Kashani-Sabet, the Robert I. Williams Term Professor of History and director of the School’s Middle East Center. Her debut novel, Martyrdom Street, chronicles the intertwining lives of three women in the years following the Iranian Revolution of 1979 and the ensuing Iran-Iraq War. A fictional account, the novel offers a compelling view of the complexity of Iranian society.

SAS scholars from a range of disciplines lent critical perspectives on the turmoil and change in the Arab world in 2011.

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The Positive Psychology Center has continued in its engagement with the U.S. Army to provide resilience training for combat troops. This program is an extension of the work of Zellerbach Family Professor of Psychology and director of the Positive Psychology Center Martin E.P. Seligman, an expert on learned helplessness and depression and a leader in the field of Positive Psychology—the study of positive emotion, character traits, and institutions. The goal of the Army Resiliency Training Program is to reduce problems among combat troops and increase the number of people who improve and grow personally after surviving trauma. Programs are held as many as seven times every month in Army bases around the world, as well as in Philadelphia. To date, more than 6,000 soldiers have participated in the training.

The School’s Fels Institute of Government published “Vacant Property Reclamation through Strategic Investment”—a report on efforts of a local organization to revitalize a Philadelphia neighborhood that experienced at 20 percent drop in population during the 1990s. The area has recently realized reduced crime rates and reduced housing vacancies, as well as an increase in new working households. By documenting this transformation Fels has provided a case study on how neighborhood groups can team up with local government to encourage reinvestment and strengthen community identity.

It is not at all uncommon for service activities to evolve naturally from research engagement. Jennifer Kyker, who just completed her Ph.D. in ethnomusicology, pursued research on a popular Zimbabwean musician who uses song to address controversial social issues. Her frequent trips to Zimbabwe gave her a first-hand understanding of the impact of the AIDS epidemic on communities there and inspired her to found a non-profit organization, Tariro, dedicated to educating young women, with a focus on orphaned teenage girls, to reduce their risk of contracting the disease.

Seeking SolUtionS

At the School of Arts and Sciences, discovery and engagement are closely linked: our scholars are engaged in communities and neighborhoods ranging from West Philadelphia to southern Africa.

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The School’s Center for the Advanced Study of India expanded its study of economic gains made by India’s Dalit class. Dalits, who comprise about one-sixth of India’s population, have historically occupied the bottom tier of the complex social hierarchy that constitutes the caste system. The research will help address one of the major challenges facing contemporary India: how to extend the benefits of its economic growth and development to marginalized social groups.

Scholarship and teaching on Korea is positioned for dramatic expansion as a result of a new agreement between Penn and Seoul National University that encourages research collaborations as well as faculty and student exchanges. Eugene Y. Park, the Korea Foundation Associate Professor in History and director of Korean Studies in SAS, played a significant role in laying the groundwork for this relationship and was among the Penn speakers featured in Korea last spring following President Gutmann’s and SNU President Yeon-Cheon

Strength in aSia

As the nations of the East rise on the world stage, the School of Arts and Sciences is strengthening its engagement in scholarship on Asia.

Oh’s announcement of the agreement. In addition, a $6 million gift from Trustee emeritus James Joo-Jin Kim, W'59, G'61, Gr'63, and an anonymous gift of $1.5 million have strengthened the newly renamed James Joo-Jin Kim Program in Korean Studies, a program that is distinguished by a broad focus on issues in contemporary Korea, as well as Korean history and culture.

The work of noted Sinologist Victor Mair, Professor of East Asian Languages and Civilizations, was highlighted last year in an acclaimed exhibition at the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, “Secrets of the Silk Road.” Mair, who served as a consultant and authored the exhibition’s catalog, has long studied many of the artifacts that were on display, particularly China’s famed Tarim mummies—seen by many as evidence of early Western contact with the East.

Gre

gory

Ben

son

victor mair

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perSpectiveS on oUr cUltUre

As our nation entered the 150th anniversary year of the start of the Civil War, Professor of History Stephanie McCurry collected honors for her recent work Confederate Reckoning: Power and Politics in the Civil War South. This book reframes historical debates about the Confederacy and the Civil War and brings into focus the previously unexamined role of poor women and slaves—and in doing so, shows how the Confederacy was inherently unsustainable.

How modern constitutional democracies reconcile their structures of citizenship to accommodate—or trump—racial and ethnic identities was the focus last year of a series of research projects and events sponsored by the Penn Program on Democracy, Citizenship and Constitutionalism. The program, which receives major support from the Mellon Foundation, engages undergraduates, graduate students, faculty, and visiting speakers and scholars. Rogers M. Smith, the Christopher H. Browne Distinguished Professor of Political Science, chairs the program and is an active participant: his work last year included opinion pieces on the birthright citizenship debate, where he proposed that cultural and historic factors argue for easing legal paths to citizenship for Mexicans.

Kaja Silverman, the Katherine Stein Sachs CW’69 and Keith L. Sachs W’67 Professor of Art History, received the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Distinguished Achievement Award. Considered the highest honor bestowed in the humanities, the award recognizes and supports Silverman’s work as a visual theorist. Her studies encompass film, photography, art, psychoanalysis, literature, and feminist theory, and her most recent book, Flesh of My Flesh, cemented her stature as one of the most gifted literary and cultural critics of our time.

Faculty working in a wide range of disciplines across the humanities and social sciences are expanding our insight into American culture.

Jose

ph G

iuff

rida

Mar

k d

iete

rich

Stephanie mcCurry

rogers m. Smith

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fUlfilling the proMiSe:artS anD ScienceS alUMni accoMpliShMent

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he impact of all that we do in the School of arts and Sciences is perhaps best illustrated by our alumni. In their professions, and in their lives, each generation of our graduates demonstrates the power of a Penn liberal arts education to shape minds and create the foundation for a lifetime of leading, creating and constructively engaging with the world. We celebrate the successes of our alumni and view their contributions as our proudest achievement.

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a DaY in the life of an engliSh Major

FULFiLLinG ThE PROMiSE: aRTS and SCiEnCES aLUMni aCCOMPLiShMEnT

For Jennifer Egan, C’85, last April 18 might have been a typical day, except for one event: the announcement that her fourth novel, A Visit from the Goon Squad, had just earned her the 2011 Pulitzer Prize for Distinguished Fiction by an American Author.

In its citation, the Pulitzer jury called Egan’s novel “an inventive investigation of growing up and growing old in the digital age, displaying a big-hearted curiosity about cultural change at warp speed.” The book centers on the lives of an aging former punk rocker and record executive and the passionate, troubled young woman who works for him. Their pasts are revealed in intimate detail, as their lives intersect with a host of characters over many years in locations ranging from New York to Naples.

“Goon Squad” is not the first of Egan’s works to win high praise. In 2001, her novel Look at Me was nominated for the National Book Award and her 2006 novel The Keep quickly became a bestseller. Earlier this year, “Goon Squad” won the National Book Critics Circle Prize.

While Kelly Writers House did not yet exist to encourage Egan’s early development as an undergraduate writer, she found a circle of influential mentors within the English department. In an interview for the Pennsylvania Gazette (“Surprises Are Always the Best,” July/August 2011), she gives particular credit to Romulus Linney, who taught playwriting and fiction from 1982 to 1995, as well as writing instructor Diana Cavallo, CW’53. Today, Egan continues to be a part of the Penn writing community, sharing her work and insights with students and alumni through Kelly Writers House events—and most likely, through future appearances on course syllabuses, at Penn and beyond.

“On the night before classes started way back in September of 1976, my mom made the daunting trek from Hill to Butcher-Speakman in the Quad to meet up with some former high school classmates. At the end of the night, my mom was asked what she thought of one particular freshman boy. She replied, “Mike’s really funny, but he’s not the type of guy you’d ever want to marry.” And that’s the story of how my parents met. Needless to say, during my first night on campus 31 years later, expectations were high.” Excerpted from the address delivered by Joseph Yellin, C’11, at the College graduation ceremony on May 15, 2011. Yellin is now a student in Penn’s Perelman School of Medicine.

great expectationS

Pie

ter M

. Van

hat

tem

/Vis

talu

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eDUcational attainMent of YoUng alUMni

In the years following graduation, College alumni frequently consolidate their career paths through additional education. According to surveys conducted by the University’s Career Services office, 72 percent of alumni from the Class of 1999 had either completed or were enrolled in an advanced degree program within 10 years of graduation. In addition, many alumni earn multiple advanced degrees.

For the Class of 2004, the survey suggests a similar path. Within five years of graduation, more than two-thirds of the Class of 2004 had either completed or were enrolled in an advanced degree program, with some already having earned multiple degrees.

alUMni noBelS: a legacY continUeS

For the second year in a row, a School of Arts and Sciences alumnus has been recognized with science’s highest honor. Ei-ichi Negishi, Gr’63, was awarded the 2010 Nobel Prize in Chemistry along with two other scientists—just one year after George Smith, C’55 was recognized with the Nobel in Physics. Negishi is the seventh

Nobel laureate to be associated with the Department of Chemistry, an illustrious group that includes three graduate and two undergraduate alumni.

The Herbert C. Brown Distinguished Professor of Chemistry at Purdue University and a Penn Chemistry Ph.D., Negishi was recognized for

developing an innovative method for using the metal palladium to link carbon molecules into larger, more complex structures.  The method is now used in research and industry worldwide to create substances with purposes as diverse as fighting AIDS and cancer, protecting crops, contributing to DNA

sequencing and illuminating the ultra-thin monitors that have revolutionized so many endeavors.  

Source: University of pennsylvania career Services alumni Surveys, 10-year-out survey of class of 1999 (summer 2009) and 5-year-out survey of class of 2004 (summer 2009).

Class of 1999

Class of 2004

B.A. only m.B.A. non-m.B.A. mASTerS

j.d. m.d. doCTorATe

28%

32%

23%

9%

48%

23%25%

21%

14%

11%14%

10%

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The School achieved strong results in its financial performance for FY 2011, meeting or exceeding targets for key categories of revenues and expenses. The School is closer to achieving sustainable faculty and staff size and we continue to fill critical open positions. The School continues to contain cost through close management of expenses and through the enhancement, where possible, of existing revenue sources and development of new revenue opportunities. Fundraising for the year exceeded $49 million. Total revenue for sponsored research increased by 6.5 percent over FY 2010. In addition, the overall financial performance of the division of Professional and Continuing Education, other professional master’s programs, and additional entrepreneurial activities surpassed budgetary expectations.

As a result of these accomplishments, the School was able to set aside reserves to seed new programs and entrepreneurial activities, as well as to prepare to meet future facilities renovation and maintenance needs and to provide quality of life improvements for faculty, staff and students. At the same time, the School sustained its momentum in important areas of research and education and recruiting faculty of the highest quality. We are actively engaged in improving our existing space and in creating new space to meet the needs of the School and the University. In FY 2011, the School completed Phase II of the Undergraduate Chemistry Laboratories, began the High Bay project to facilitate the construction of astronomical instruments, became fully engaged in the construction of the Krishna P. Singh Center for Nanotechnology and contributed to the College Hall West Wing renovations.

The School will continue to maintain strong management of its resources throughout FY 2012 in order to be able to fund its highest priorities. The economy continues to provide a challenging environment in which to achieve our financial goals. Undergraduate tuition rates are expected to grow at modest levels in the next several years; at the same time, the School is mindful of the growing financial aid needs of its students—a situation that affects SAS disproportionately relative to Penn’s other undergraduate divisions. With the continued support of the University, along with the School’s Board of Overseers and other friends, SAS will maintain its financial health, fueling achievement of the goals and priorities of arts and sciences at Penn.

fiScal Year 2011

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fY 2011 operating BUDget: $422.7 Million

ToTAl revenueS And TrAnSferS

ToTAl exPendiTureS

total allocated costs

0.9%

41.9% traditional Undergraduate tuition

Graduate & other tuitionSpecial program tuition 1.6%

total Sponsored programs

Investment Income 7%

Gift Income 2.6%

other fees 1.6%

other Income 1.7%

Subvention & transfers

14.5%

9.4%

19.7%

20.1% academic compensation15.1%

Undergraduate Student aid 15%

15.2%

9.8% Non-academic compensation

8.7% employee Benefits

Debt Service & principalpre-payment

Non-payroll & capital & equipment expenses

Graduate Student Stipend/aid 15.2%

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SUpporting the School of artS anD ScienceS

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he supporters of penn arts and Sciences transform the School in countless ways. Thanks to their generosity, SAS raised over $49 million in the 2011 fiscal year. These contributions pave a new path to the future every year for the hundreds of students who receive scholarships that make a College education at Penn possible. They are an investment in faculty who are expanding the frontiers of knowledge. They support the innovations that help position SAS at the forefront of a liberal education. And they fund the facilities that promote outstanding teaching and research and ensure the School’s continued vitality.

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POwERinG TRanSFORMaTiOn: SUPPORT FOR PEnn aRTS & SCiEnCES

The School gratefully acknowledges the following gifts of $1 million or more that were made in 2010-2011. These contributions, and all gifts in support of the Making History in the Arts and Sciences Campaign, catalyze student and faculty achievement across the School, at Penn and beyond.

Richard A. Axilrod, WG’85, created the Stephen and Katherine Axilrod Endowed Scholarship Fund and the Richard and Nancy Axilrod Endowed Scholarship Fund for students in the College.

The Otto Hass Charitable Trust provided support for the construction of the Neural and Behavioral Sciences Building.

Madeleine M. Joullié, G’50, Gr’53, HOM’68, a professor of chemistry in SAS, shared her intention to bequeath a gift to support undergraduate and

graduate research in organic chemistry.

James Joo-Jin Kim, W’59, G’61, Gr’63, and Agnes Chung Sook Kim, parents, gave a gift to strengthen the Korean Studies program, to be renamed the James Joo-Jin Kim Program in Korean Studies.

The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation provided support for the scholarly work of Kaja Silverman, Katherine Stein Sachs CW’69 and Keith L. Sachs W’67 Professor of Art History,

88%

49%

77%

81%

$176.4 million $200.5 million

Amount received

Goal

faculty Support

Student financial Aid

undergraduate education

facilities Projects

all figures current as of June 30, 2011.

caMpaign UpDate: Making hiStorY in the artS anD ScienceS

$87.3 million $180 million

$41.8 million $54 million

$53.1 million $65.5 million

By the close of FY 2011, the School of Arts and Sciences had raised $358.6 million toward its total Making History Campaign goal of $500 million. The School continued to make progress in a number of key areas including faculty and graduate student support, undergraduate programs and critical facilities projects including the Neural and Behavioral Sciences Building.

Even more important than the dollars raised to date is the impact that is already being felt across the School. In the course of the Campaign, 29 endowed faculty chairs have been established –an increase of 25 percent in the number of endowed positions. Nearly 200 scholarships have been established for students in the College and $23.5 million have been contributed in support of graduate students. The Music Building and the newly renovated undergraduate Chemistry

Laboratories are providing students and faculty with state-of-the-art spaces for teaching and learning. Naming gifts have strengthened critical academic areas including the Barbara and Edward Netter Center for Community Partnerships, the Katz Center for Advanced Judaic Studies and the James Joo-Jin Kim Program in Korean Studies.

As we move into FY 2012, completion of funding for the Neural and Behavioral Sciences Building and support for undergraduate financial aid remain our most pressing needs. We look to our alumni, parents and friends to help us achieve success in these crucial areas and to continue to strengthen SAS as the foundation for excellence at Penn.

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by awarding her the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Distinguished Achievement Award

Ruth A. Moorman and Sheldon N. Simon, parents, gave a gift to establish the Moorman-Simon Program for Education and Schooling for Democracy and Citizenship, a program of the Barbara and Edward Netter Center for Community Partnerships.

Fawad Mukhtar, parent, created the Mian Mukhtar A. Sheikh Scholarship for students in the College from Pakistan.

Maury Povich, C’62, made a gift to support the journalism program through the Maury Povich Journalism Program Fund.

A bequest from the estate of the late Samuel D. Schack, C’74, Gr’80, established the Samuel D. Schack Professorship in Algebra.

The Schlager Family Foundation, Judith P. and S. Lawrence Schlager, parents, Eric D. Schlager, C’86, Beth Cherashore Schlager, C’86, Robert A. and Amy R. Schlager, parents, Joan Schlager Weinsten, C’91, and

Making hiStorY, tranSforMing the caMpUS

The Making History Campaign is already having a tangible impact on the School in the form of major facilities improvements. The School started the year with a celebration of the opening of the newly renovated undergraduate Chemistry Laboratories. In February, the groundbreaking for the Krishna P. Singh Center for Nanotechnology marked a milestone for science at Penn and brought SAS and the School of Engineering and Applied Science one step closer to a shared goal: maximizing Penn’s capacity for pioneering, collaborative research in a field that has the potential to revolutionize everything from drug delivery to energy production. And although it has been more than a year since the School celebrated the reopening of the historic Music Building, the accolades continue to come from both the campus and the design community, including recognition as the first LEED Gold building on the Penn campus. The LEED certification framework is a system of internationally recognized “green” building standards.

Mark R. Weinsten, WG’90, endowed the Schlager Family Scholarship.

Cecilia Segawa Seigle, Gr’71, professor emerita of Japanese studies in SAS, shared her intention to bequeath a gift to support graduate students specializing in Japanese studies.

An anonymous donor made a discretionary gift to support the teaching and research mission of SAS.

An anonymous donor contributed funds to support a scholarship for College students from Asia as well as a variety of programs across SAS, including the Huntsman Program in International Studies and Business, the Center for the Advanced Study of India and a seminar in the History of Art department.

An anonymous donor made a gift to support the construction of the Neural and Behavioral Sciences Building.

music Building

Mat

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SUpporterS of the School of artS anD ScienceS

we are pleased to recognize the following

donors who have enhanced the excellence

of the School of arts and Sciences.

they embody the spirit of the School

with their dedication to achieving and

maintaining distinction in the liberal arts.

they demonstrate a unique awareness

of the importance of balancing tradition

and innovation in higher education and

champion both in equal measure. their

vision informs our pursuit of excellence, and

their generous support moves us forward.

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$1M LIFETIME DONOrS TO THE SCHOOL OF ArTS AND SCIENCESThe following individuals, who have contributed a total of $1 million or more to the School, sustain the University’s scholarly tradition in the liberal arts. The School is proud to acknowledge these extraordinary donors.Anonymous (11)Anilesh Ahuja, C’89, and Tania

AhujaThe Arnhold FamilyRichard Axilrod, WG’85Arie and Rebecka Belldegrun,

parentsArthur Bilger, W’75, and Dahlia

Bilger, parents, and the Bilger Foundation

Allison Jane Blitzer, C’91, and David S. Blitzer, W’91

Mitchell J. Blutt, C’78, M’82, WG’87, and Margo Krody Blutt

Stanley M. Bogen, W’58, and Roberta Bogen, parents

David and Mary Boies, parentsRoxanne Conisha Bok, C’81, and

Scott L. Bok, C’81,W’81, L’84David M. Brush, C’82, and Karen

Clark Brush, W’82, parentsWilliam Polk Carey, W’53Christopher J. Carrera, C’88Raymond Ch’ien, Gr’78, and Hwee

Leng Whang, G’75, parentsHenry Cho, WG’92Kunho Cho, C’75, and Tay Yun Cho,

G’78, parentsYongge Dai and Xinmei ZhangBetsy Marks Darivoff, C’79, and

Philip M. Darivoff, W’79, WG’85, parents

Paul W. DiMaura, C’65, and Karen DiMaura

Celia P. and Daniel E. Dosoretz, parents

Mary Elberty, CW’55David D. Elliman, C’73, WG’77, and

Andrea Branch, parentsMarjorie G. Ernest, CW’56Kristin Kelly FisherJay Fishman, W’74, WG’74, and

Randy Fishman, parents

Denise Foderaro, SAMP’78, and Frank P. Quattrone, W’77, parents

Robert A. Fox, C’52, and Penny Grossman Fox, Ed’53

Sarah W. Fuller, CW’71, parentLeonard Goldberg, W’55, and

Wendy Goldberg, parentsSusan Udolf Goldenberg, C’85, L’88,

and Jeffrey GoldenbergSteven F. Goldstone, C’67, parentStephen M. Gorn, C’84, parent, and

the Gorn Family FoundationNorman C. Grosman, W’52, WG’53Martin D. Gruss, W’64Otto Haas Charitable TrustMindy Halikman Heyer, C’79, W’79,

WG’80, and Andrew Heyer, W’79, WG’79, parents

Stephen J. Heyman, W’59, parentHerbert Irving, C’39, G’40, and

Florence IrvingJoanna M. Jacobson, C’82, and

Jonathon S. Jacobson, W’83, parents

Elliot S. Jaffe, W’49, and Roslyn S. Jaffe, parents

The Jesselson FamilyMadeleine M. Joullie, G’50, Gr’53,

HOM’68 Harry P. Kamen, C’54Edward W. Kane, C’71, and Martha J.

Wallace, parentsMartha and Bruce Karsh, parentsEleanor Meyerhoff Katz, parentPaul K. Kelly, C’62, WG’64, parentNand and Jeet Khemka FoundationJames Joo-Jin Kim, W’59, G’61,

Gr’63, and Agnes Chung Sook Kim, parents

Bradford R. Klatt and Robin Friedman Klatt, parents

David M. Knott, C’67, WG’73, parentPaul Koether

Jonathan W. Kolker, W’57, and Judith E. Kolker, parents

Mary Perednia Landy, C’83, and Joseph P. Landy, W’83

Cathy and Marc Lasry, parentsLeonard A. Lauder, W’54, parentJerry Lee and Ellen Lee, CGS’03Richard F. Lee, Gr’86, and Susannie

C. Lee, Gr’85, parentsStephen A. Levin, C’67, parentRichard E. Levine, C’81, M’85,

GM’89, and Wendy Hurt Levine, parents

William J. Levy, W’57, L’64, and The William J. Levy Foundation

Martin Lipton, W’52, and Susan Lytle Lipton, parents

Carolyn Hoff Lynch, CW’68, and Peter S. Lynch, WG’68, parents

Rao MakineniHoward S. Marks, W’67, parentEdward J. Mathias, C’64, parentMargy Ellin Meyerson, G’93Ella Warren Shafer Miller, CW’51,

and Paul F. Miller, Jr., W’50, Hon’81, parents

Herbert S. and Patrice R. Miller, parents

Fawad Mukhtar, parentBeth Goldberg Nash, C’89, and

Joshua Nash, C’83The late Edward Netter, C’53, and

Barbara Netter, parentsNatan Peisach, W’61, and Lidia

Peisach, parentsRichard C. Perry, W’77, parentMaury Povich, C’62Michael J. Price, W’79, and Vikki

L. PricePTS FoundationMark H. Rachesky, C’81Gary D. Rose, C’67, and Karen Bress

Rose, CW’67, GEd’68, parents

Burton X. Rosenberg, C’63, and Sheli Z. Rosenberg, parents

Jonathan D. Rosenstein, C’86, and Lisa Gladstone Rosenstein, W’87

Katherine Stein Sachs, CW’69, and Keith L. Sachs, W’67, parents

Judith P. and S. Lawrence Schlager, parents

The Jay and Jeanie Schottenstein Family

Julie Breier Seaman, C’86, and Jeffrey R. Seaman, W’83, parents

Cecilia Segawa Seigle, Gr’71Alvin V. Shoemaker, W’60, Hon’95,

and Sally P. Shoemaker, parentsDavid M. Silfen, C’66, and Lyn G.

Silfen, parentsLaurence B. Simon, C’68, G’74,

parentSheldon N. Simon, W’79, and Ruth

A. Moorman, parentsSaul P. Steinberg, W’59, and

Gayfryd Steinberg, parentsIone Apfelbaum Strauss, CW’54,

parentTeece Family FoundationRichard M. Thune, C’69, parentP. Roy Vagelos, C’50, Hon’99, and

Diana T. Vagelos, parentsAndrew and Erna Finci ViterbiFrederick J. Warren, ME’60,

WG’61, parentDavid B. Weigle, W’69George A. Weiss, W’65, parentCharles K. Williams II, Gr’78,

Hon’97Paul C. Williams, W’67, parentDick Wolf, C’69, parentKen Young-Gak Yun, C’77, and

Jinah P. Yun, parentsWilliam J. Zellerbach, W’42, parent

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Anonymous (9)Arthur and Sari Agatston, parentsAnand Ahuja, C’07Harish Ahuja, parentSunil AhujaDanielle Mandelbaum Anderman, C’94Richard J. Aslanian, C’82Constance AustinJonathan M. Avnet, C’71, and Barbara

Brody Avnet, parentsMarcy A. Bass, C’77, and Scott A. Fisher,

C’76, G’76, parentsEmilio Bassini, C’71, W’71, WG’73, and

Reina Marin Bassini, CW’72, GEd’72, parents

Harris BaumDouglas Belgrad, C’87, and Christine

Belgrad, W’87Robert L. Benz, C’74, and Marie Uberti-

Benz, RES’82, parentsRodney B. Berens, C’67, WG’72, parentNancy Cowen Bergmann, C’89, and Robert

A. Bergmann, W’88Lea and Wayne Berman, parentsTracy Margel Bernstein, C’88, and Adam

Bernstein, W’85, parentsKeith B. Bickel, C’86, and Susan Onel

Bickel, C’86Kristine A. Billmyer, GRD’90Wendy Lynn Bloom, C’88Jonathan S. Blue, C’89Ellen Varet Bock, CW’67, parentNeil S. Braun, C’74, and Anne C. Flick,

CW’74, GED’76, parentsDaniel J. and Estrellita Brodsky Family

FoundationElizabeth Appel Brown, CW’52, and

Lawrance A. Brown, Jr., C’50Sylvia Brown, W’82, G’83Andrew R. Brownstein, C’75, W’75,

WG’76, and Elise Jaffe Brownstein, CW’76, parents

Paul J. Burger, W’76, and Ossi BurgerJennifer and James Butler, parentsBeth A. Cardwell, C’78, M’84, and Albert

V. Glowasky, C’73, G’75, WG’84, parentsRobert and Mercedes Carrady, parentsChungha Cha, W79, parentClifford K. Chiu, W’80H. Chin Chou, C’87, and Veronica ChouTerence Chu, C’81, and Wendy Chung

Chu, C’81, SW’83Barton J. Cohen, W’72, and Phyllis Gordon

Cohen, CW’72, L’75Dorcas Lee Colas, C’84, and John T. Colas,

W’84Bill Constantine, C’66, WG’68, and Maggie

Constantine, parents

Lynn Evans Coons, CW’72, and Theodore W. Coons, CE’72, parents

Chara Cooper and John C. HaasRobert Cort, C’68, G’70, WG’74, and

Rosalie SwedlinRichard V. Cronk, C’60, parentLisa Cummins, C’84, and Marc G.

Cummins, WG’84, parentsIsaac and Ivette Dabah, parentsIlene Dalinka, C’88, and Arthur H. Penn,

W’85, WG’86John G. Danhakl, parentSusan Frier Danilow, CW’74, G’74, and

Greg Danilow, parentsClaudia and Carlos de la Cruz, Jr., parentsMichael E. Dee, W’81, and Shelly Hoglund

DeeJoseph S. Doyle, C’61, parentFrances “Louie” and Ralph Dweck, parentsCatherine E. Smith Ebert, C’03, and

William H. Ebert, C’03, and the Hyde Foundation

Cynthia Frank Edelson, C’80, and David B. Edelson, parents

Steven Eisman, C’84, and Valerie K. Feigen, C’85

Thomas Q. Elgar, C’65Matrice Ellis-Kirk, C’82Mark Ellman, C’67Gerald Entine, C’65, G’65, parentEdward J. Falk, W’66Dwight R. Fearins, W’60Steven B. Feirson, C’72Regina Feldman-Goldstein, CW’75, and

Jeffrey D. Goldstein, W’75, parentsLori Rutman Fife, C’80, and Mark Fife,

W’78, parentsJohn G. Finley, C’78, W’78Allison Schneirov Fisch, C’88, and Steven

Lloyd Fisch, C’86Leslie and Michael Flesch, parentsJudy Orden Flesh and Robert T. Flesh,

parentsAnita Dann Friedman, parentTony Fromer, C’82, and Amy FromerMichael A. Gaviser, C’92Jennifer Channick Germain, W’94, and

Paul E. Germain, W’93 David A. Gerson, C’85, and Donna

Langsam Gerson, C’86John N. Gilbert, Jr., W’60, and Jill Gilbert,

parents Seth M. Ginns, C’00Michael J. Glosserman, W’68, and Marilyn

Glosserman, parentsAlan J. Gold, W’55Joseph A. Goldblum, W’71, and Jane W.

Goldblum, parents

The Goldie Anna Charitable TrustCynthia Rabin Golub, W’76, parentBrian Gonick, W’86, and Dawn M. Gonick,

GFA’94, GFA’97Bryan E. Gordon, W’83Ana R. and Leonardo D. Gravier, parentsEvan Greenspan, C’79, and Liz GreenspanBette and Robert M. Gromis, parentsVicki Panzier Gross, W’87, and Michael

Gross, parentsLisa A. Grushkin, C’01Henry B. Gutman, C’72, parentPatrick T. Hackett, C’83, W’83, and

Janienne Fitzgibbon Hackett, ENG’83, parents

Michael Halpern, W’83Jamie O. Handwerker, C’83, and Haim

HandwerkerAllison Brody Hart, C’98, and Jed A. Hart,

W’89The Havens Family Michael A. Heric, C’93, W’93Jerry Herman, C’75, parentPaul L. Herring, C’65, and Marlene A.

Herring, parentsBarry J. Hershey, W’64, and Connie

Hershey, parentsLee S. Hillman, W’77James M. Ho, WG’87, parentRichard M. Horowitz, C’83, and Ruth M.

Farber-Horowitz, C’83, WG’88Betty and S.L. Huang, parents, and the

Huang Family FoundationHenry Daniel Jackson, C’86, W’86James C. Johnson, C’74, L’77, and Margaret

JohnsonJ. Mark Junewicz, W’74, WG’75, and Renée

Junewicz Lisa D. Kabnick, C’77, and John H.

McFaddenJanet Maisel Kagan, C’84, and Howard

KaganAllan Kanner, C’75, and Robin Cohen

KannerRobert S. Kapito, W’79, parentArthur M. Kaplan, C’67, and R. Duane

PerryRobin Harrison Kaplan, C’91, and Jeffrey

Kaplan, W’87Sheryl Drangel Kaye, W’86, and Charles R.

Kaye, parentsOfir J. Kedar and Eva J. Sonesh-Kedar,

parents, and the Kedar Family and Zoltan Sonesh Foundation

John J. King II, C’74, and Pamela Smith King, parents

Christopher Kirsten, C’78

Kathleen M. Kopp, CW’74, and Alfredo R. Perez

Alissa S. Korn, C’89, and Steven Jeffrey Korn, W’89

Caryn O. Kraff, C’83, and Lowell D. Kraff, W’83, parents

Daniel J. Krifcher, W’83, and Jocelyn B. Krifcher, parents

Hillary Miller Krouse, C’88, and Rodger R. Krouse, W’83

Carole Steinberg Krumland and Ted C. Krumland, parents

Nancy Lewson Kurz, C’80, Howard A. Kurz, C’79, and the Howard Kurz Family Foundation

Jill Smerling Kushner, CW’69, parent William Kussell, C’80, and Ada KussellRaphael Langenscheidt, C’10Debra Langer, C’92, and Jonathan Langer,

W’92David Langfitt, C’79, and Margaret LangfittDavid Lee, C’90, and Tess Lee Hyung Soon Lee, W’93, and Susan Choi

Lee, L’95Lee Chang FamilyHarlan B. Levine, C’91Jeffrey and Randi Levine, parentsMarshall P. Levine, WG’97John F. Levis, C’81Edythe Oberfeld Levitt, W’59, parentValerie Levitt Schmaier, C’87Cindy Shmerler Levy, C’81, and Ford

Jeffrey Levy, EE’79Daniel Ehud Levy, C’87, W’87, and Rosy

LevyPhilip B. Lindy, W’52Pamela Lipkin and Bruce Ratner, parentsLui FoundationAndrea Pomerantz Lustig, C’86, and

Matthew LustigMatthew F. Luth, C’00, W’00Patrick C.H. Ma, W’80A. Bruce Mainwaring, C’47, and Margaret

Redfield Mainwaring, Ed’47, parentsElissa Caterfino Mandel, C’83Jack S. Mann, W’82, and Meryl B.

Friedenberg Mann, WG’83 Aaron H. Marks, C’90, W’90, and Elaine

Brichta Marks, C’91Andrew W. Marks, C’88, and Gail

Freidenrich Marks, C’88Allison Bieber McKibben, C’93, and Jeffrey

Stephen McKibben, W’93Marc Frederic McMorris, C’90, WG’94Amy Tucker Meltzer, C’89, and Jonathan

MeltzerLisa Gottesman-Mendelsohn, W’78, and

Hank Mendelsohn

DonorS with giftS of $100,000 or More in the laSt five YearS to the School of artS anD ScienceS

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Robert C. Michele, C’81, and Katherine L. Michele, parents

Gillian Meltzer Miniter, C’90Andrea Mitchell, CW’67Ronald L. Moelis, C’78, W’78, and Kerry

Moelis, parentsAbraham M. Mora, C’75Anthony P. Morris, C’68, and Susan W.

Morris, parentsMothers Work, Inc.Elon R. Musk, C’97, W’97, and the Musk

FoundationSteven A. Nichtberger, C’83, W’83, and

Laura J. Bessen-NichtbergerErnst Nijkert, C’83Daniel L. Nir, C’82, and Jill B. NirFrances Bickell Novelli, CW’64, and

William D. Novelli, C’63, ASC’64, parentsWilliam O’Flanagan, C’91, and Michelle

Toll, C’91John A. O’Malley, Gr’63, and Mary E.

O’MalleyDouglas Ostrover, C’84Dhananjay M. Pai, W’83, parentJason Michael Pantzer, C’93Gordon A. Paris, C’75, WG’77Mae Agnes Pasquariello, CW’53, GrD’85,

and Patrick S. Pasquariello, RES’63, parents

Samuel J. Pearlstein, ENG’87, and Sheryl Saranga Pearlstein, C’87

James N. Perry, Jr., C’82Julie Beren Platt, C’79, and Marc E. Platt,

C’79, parentsMarsha M. Plotnitsky, C’78, WG’80Gabriele Quandt, parent

Christopher D. Quinn, C’74, and Lorraine Carrady Quinn, CW’73, parents

Ramanan Raghavendran, ENG’89, W’89RBSL Bergman FoundationArthur L. Rebell, W’62, parentPeter W. Reed, C’60John R. Reinsberg, C’78, and Lori

Reinsberg, parentsJohn and Nora Ricciardi, parentsHoward Rich, C’59, and Sharon Rich,

parentsLeslee Halpern-Rogath, CW’73, and David

Rogath, parentsBlair Treisman Rosenfeld, C’89, and Louis

S. Rosenfeld, WG’82 Richard Jay Rosenstein, C’86Ivan Ross, W’83, and Nina Ross, parentsPeter E. Roth, C’81, WG’85, and Michelle

RothThe Rothfeld FamilySteven J. Routh, C’79, parentAmy Bright Ruben, C’82, Charles S. and Elsa Sale, parentsCynthia Chang Scanlan, C’84, and Brian

Scanlan, W’84, parentsDevin Schain, C’88Lee Schalop, C’85, W’85, and Lisa

Auerbach Schalop, C’85William Schawbel, W’61, parentAvery Scheiner, C’78, and Lynne JacobsAmy R. and Robert A. Schlager, parentsBeth Cherashore Schlager, C’86, and Eric

D. Schlager, C’86Phil Schlein, C’57, parentDavid E. Schulman, C’82, L’85, and

Suzanne E. Turner, C’82

Jeffrey B. Sehgal, C’81, WG’88Jeffrey L. Seltzer, W’78, and Ana Seltzer,

parentsMarwan Shakarchi, W’85, parentEmily Layzer Sherwood, CW’73, Ned L.

Sherwood, W’71, and the Ned and Emily Sherwood Family Foundation

David Alan Shiffman, C’89, and Deborah Zinn Shiffman, C’89

Nikki Schefler Silver, C89, and Brad I. Silver, W89

Wendy A. Silverstein, W’82, WG’86Stephanie Kleban Simon, C’96, W’96, and

David E. Simon, W’95, WG’01Stacey Snider, C’82, and Gary JonesRobert J. Sobel, C’85, and Karen Sobel Rajiv Sobti, Gr’84, parentSanjiv Sobti, WG’85, Gr’86, and Sangeeta

Sobti, parentMarie-Christine Solal, C’88Amy Stavis, W’85, and Robert Stavis,

W’84, EAS’84Marc D. Stern, W’84Keith Stock, WG’79, and Cathleen StockDebra Stone, C’79, and David GlaserBrett A. Sundheim, C’01, and Daniel S.

Sundheim, W’99Hope Schefler Taitz, C’86, and Glenn

Preston Taitz, parentsErica and Steven Tishman, parentsGregory Trubowitsch, C’83, and Holly

Mindich, W’83Charles Edward Vieth, WG’82, and

Claudia P. Vieth, parentsEdmond D. Villani, Gr’73Luis J. L. Virata, WG’79, parent

Greg A. Walker, C’78, and Susan H. Walker, parents

Vera Wang, parentDenzel and Pauletta Washington, parentsAlan S. Waxman, C’97Jacqueline Mandelbaum Weidman, C’96,

and Peter Andrew Weidman, W’96Alan G. Weiler, W’55, and Elaine Gordon

Hoffman, parentsMichael D. and Sharon Weiner, parentsNeil A. Weiner, C’82, WG’86Joan Schlager Weinsten, C’91, and Mark R.

Weinsten, WG’90Caroline Gittis Werther, C’83, L’86, and

Daniel Werther, parentsBenjamin J. Whitfield, C’98, W’98, and

Jennifer Suh WhitfieldThomas L. Williams, C’77, GEE’81, and

Yvonne Williams, parentsAllison Wintner, C’86, W’86, and Jeffrey

Wintner, C’86Albert E. WolfDerish M. Wolff, C’57, and Maureen

Robinson, parents Howard L. Wolk, C’86, W’86Hwee Yong Yap-Whang, parent Sun Tze Whang, parentDoris E. Yocum, CGS’59, Gr’78Susan Beller Yoss, W’80, and Alan Yoss,

parentsEhsan El-Tahry Zayan, CW’73, parentZeldin Family FoundationZimmerman Family

List current as of June 30, 2011

Gre

gory

Ben

son

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ces Gregory C. Aaron, C’89, and

Jeanette C. Aaron, C’89Joseph C. Y. Abrams, C’78, W’78Gabriel M. Aherne, C’99, WEV’05Genevieve C. Anderson, C’88, and

Matthew R. Anderson, C’88Melvin T. L. Ang, GR’83Martha E. Angove and Carl P.

Kaufman, parentsAnonymous (9)Amy B. Articolo, C’93 in honor of

Lauren and Leah ArticoloBama Athreya, C’88Jonathan M. Avnet, C’71, and

Barbara Brody Avnet, parentsMargaret Kerr Baker, G’67Alan D. Barnett, C’78, WG’83Charlotte E. Bartlett, CW’47, SW’54Rebecca D. Baxt, C’91, M’95, WG’96,

RES’97, and Jonathan Baruch Shammash, C’88, M’92

Laura Leff Becker, GR’78, and Reid C. Becker, WG’74

Alexander J. Bellos, C’06Elise B. Benatar, C’85, parentAndrew S. Berman, WG’81, and Lisa

C. Berman, parentsAndrew N. Binns, facultyDanielle M. Blake, C’09Ryan D. Blicher, C’08 in honor of

Bert Blicher, WEV’74, and Marci Blicher, GED’77

Robert M. Bliss, Jr., C’65Mitchell J. Blutt, C’78, M’82, WG’87,

and Margo Krody BluttJonathan L. Bock, C’74, GED’75,

WG’82, and Judith Lutz Bock, parents

Cheryl Brandes and Lloyd J. Pine, parents

Craig W. and Nancy S. Branigan, parents

Claudia R. Braunstein, WG’81, and Marc Braunstein, WG’79, parents

Carly A. Brooks, C’00, and Brad A. Prutkin, C’95

Michael Brown, C’69Larry M. Bush, C’73Rebecca W. Bushnell, faculty, and

John TonerMariellen F. Calter, C’90, and Philip

R. Eager, C’88, L’91Francis J. Carey, C’45, L’49, parentWilliam Polk Carey, W’53Christopher J. Carrera, C’88Alberto Chamorro, Sr., CHE’50,

parentAlberto J. Chamorro, III, C’05Alan and Ubelda Chamorro, parentsAlberto J. Chamorro, W’78, parentCarolina M. Chamorro, C’09Valeria M. Chamorro, C’10Chao-Hua Chang and Chuan-Ling

Hu, parentsMichele Chang, C’96Marim D. Charry, C’56Wilburn L. Chesser, C’86Gloria Twine Chisum, GR’60,

HON’94, and Melvin J. Chisum, C’43, M’52

Wilma M. Chung, W’78, and Norbert M. Seifert, W’77

Perry H. Clark, C’68, and Elaine L. Clark

Judith Dooley Clark, CW’63, and L. John Clark, W’63, WG’68, parents

Elie D. and Sandra R. Cohen, parents

Reuben H. Cohen, C’08Richard E. and Shelley A. Coleman,

parentsClaudette Kemper Columbus,

GR’61, and Robert R. Columbus, GR’62

Dareus O. Conover, C’98Bill Constantine, C’66, WG’68, and

Maggie Constantine, parentsJames M. Coyle, G’52Christine Cronin, WG’89Nancy S. Cruikshank, CW’52Rachanee Anne Curry, C’92

Betsy Marks Darivoff, C’79, and Philip M. Darivoff, W’79, WG’85, parents

Barbara Spraggins Davis, CGS’77Campbell M. Davis, C’63Peter M. Deane, C’83Bhaskar Deb, C’84, G’85Peter A. Diana, GRP’79Brandon N. Egren, C’07Robert L. Eichelberger, C’56Joseph Engelberg, G’58Lauren Simmons Feldman, C’96Lori Rutman Fife, C’80, and Mark

Fife, W’78, parentsWalter A. Figel, Jr., C’64, parentCaryn Fine, C’80Lara K. Freishtat, C’04Sarah Wilder Fuller, CW’71, parentJulian H. Gingold, C’58Stephanie H. Girshovich, C’94, L’97Francis T. Giuliano, C’63, L’66,

parentRichard A. Glock, G’67Akshat Goenka, C’09Richard S. Goldberg, W’60, parentJack A. Gomberg, C’70, M’74Shira L. Gordon, C’06Abraham S. Gorelick, C’78, and

Laurie Eckstein Gorelick, C’79, W’79

Melvyn Greberman, C’62, G’63Carol Pooser GreenbergEric S. Greenberg, W’88Arthur E. Greene, C’44, and Doris

Mozenter Greene, ED’50, GED’51Kristin Greene, C’94, WG’02Mary Hayward Griffith, CW’67Steven D. Grushkin, parentPayal Gupta, G’98, GR’02Robbie Brennan Hain, C’79,

GED’79, and George W. Hain, III, W’79, parents

Michael Halpern, W’83Jennifer Cowan Hannon, C’89John G. Harkins, Jr., C’53, L’58

Caitlin C. Hartigan, C’07Alan G. Hassenfeld, C’70, and

Vivien HassenfeldEleanor S. Herlands in honor of

David E. Barensfeld, C’73, G’73, and Mary Evans Barensfeld, GAR’06, GLA’06

Howard Lawrence Herman, C’89Jennifer E. Hersh, C’04, GM’05Aaron L. Hillman, C’95Richard H. Himes, C’56, and Susan

V. HimesStephen G. Hirsch, C’86 in memory

of Irving Chais, parent Teck Hua Ho, G’92, GRW’93Katie Klein Holliday, C’02, and

Samuel H. Holliday, ENG’01, WG’09

Ross B. Hopkins, III, C’66Tiffany Y. Hu, C’13Charles W. Hudson, C’50Leonard Indyk, G’61Robert R. Irving, C’51William Henry Jesunas, LPS’08Sara Beth Kalb, CW’75, and Sanford

Lee Pfeffer, C’75, L’87Daniel L. Keating, C’03Mr. and Mrs. Gordon A. Keil, parentNancy Lee B. Kelly, parentPaul K. Kelly, C’62, WG’64, parentTimothy M. Kelly, W’77, parentJohn J. King II, C’74, and Pamela

Smith King, parentsRaynard S. Kington, FEL’87, WG’88,

GRW’91John A. Kneeland, C’08Jean-Marie KneeleyHsing-Ling and Kang H. Kong,

parentsFrederic M. Krieger, C’72, parentCarmen B. Kunyczka, CGS’78,

CGS’87Lloyd F. Lampell, G’66 in memory

of Thomas C. Cochran, GR’30, HON’72

penn artS anD ScienceS annUal giving

The following individual donors are gratefully acknowledged for their 2010 - 2011 unrestricted annual gifts to the School of Arts and Sciences.

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Lois Veith Latimer, CW’48Alexandra Leake, CW’70Richard F. Lee, GR’86, and Susannie

Cheung Lee, GR’85, parentsEdgar David Legaspi, G’86, WG’86

in memory of Raul and Elizabeth Legaspi

Patricia Anne Lemmerman, GLA’86, and James H. Wolford

Donald M. Levine, GR’58Irene Du Pont Light, CW’67Bill Liu, C’10Jinxun Liu, parentBenjamin A. Loew, C’05, LPS’08Lydia Miles Logan, C’92Eugene S. Lubot, C’63Elizabeth S. Lustrin, C’84Carolyn Hoff Lynch, CW’68, and

Peter S. Lynch, WG’68, parentsDuane R. Lyons, C’83A. Bruce Mainwaring, C’47, and

Margaret Redfield Mainwaring, ED’47, parents

Alexander C. and Pamela R. Mamourian in honor of Marcus A. Mamourian, W’48

Morisa J. Marin, C’82, and Eugene Coman, parents

Morton R. Maser, C’53, M’57 in memory of J. Maser and F. Maser

Linda Martinson Mayer, C’76, parent

Stanley P. Mayers Jr., C’49, M’53Marjorie Ryan McCarthy, CW’49Jonathan R. Miller, C’05, and Ryan

Miller, C’07Shannon D. Miller, C’87Anne Marie Montaquila, C’88, and

John Montaquila, W’88Anthony P. Morris, C’68, G’74, and

Susan W. Morris, parentsVincent J. Moser, C’48Kelly A. Mulroney, C’90Jennifer I. Pae Murphy, C’82, and

Raymond August Murphy, C’80, GR’84, M’91

Steven A. Nichtberger, C’83, W’83, and Laura J. Bessen-Nichtberger

Maxwell D. Norman, C’00, and Jessica R. Schraub, C’00

Frances Bickell Novelli, CW’64, and William D. Novelli, C’63 ASC’64, parents

Andrew S. Obus, GR’09Lauren M. Ordene, C’04 in memory

of Henry Cohen and Norman Ordene

Richard M. Orin, parentDhananjay M. Pai, W’83, parentBetsy Victoria Palmieri, C’85Chandrika Pathak, G’82, and Dalip

Pathak, WG’78, parentsJames P. Patton, C’67, and Jacqueline

Webster-Patton, NU’67James N. Perry, Jr., C’82William B. Pickering, G’49Suzann M. Pileggi, C’91, LPS’08, and

James O. PawelskiAllison Bosniak Pogany, C’98, and

Brett J. Pogany, ENG’97, W’97Robin K. Reagan, G’89, WG’89Frank R. Reale, C’67, and Josephine

RealeKathleen Joyce Reilly, C’85, M’89,

FEL’95, and Michael L. Nace, FEL’96

John R. Reinsberg, C’78, and Lori W. Reinsberg, parents

Christopher H. Rice, C’76, G’76Kellie E. Rizzieri in honor of Kellie

Elizabeth Brennan Flipp, C’87Thomas L. Rodgers, C’92, WG’04Gary D. Rose, C’67, and Karen Bress

Rose, CW’67, GED’68, parentsStuart G. Roseman, C’84Stuart Rosen, L’84, and Susan Rosen,

parentsAmy Sarah Rosenberg, C’84Noah S. Rosenthal, C’00 in memory

of Lee Rosenthal, C’70Federico Rossi, C’95

Steven L. Roth, W’66, parentJeffrey K. Rothenberg, W’77, WG’77,

parentAmy Bright Ruben, C’82Joanne M. Rubin, C’82Estate of Randolph P. Russell, C’1887Gregory C. Salton, C’06Cal M. Sandman, C’48Louis Sandor, Jr., C’57, D’61Paul S. Sarno, C’61, parentWilliam R. Schmalstieg, GR’56Robert C. Schneider, L’79, WG’79,

and Regina M. Schneider, parentsTheodore David Schweitz, C’03Julie Breier Seaman, C’86, and

Jeffrey R. Seaman, W’83, parentsFrank M. Shanbacker, III, C’68Jacob Shragowitz, C’43, M’47, parentAlexander and Irina Shtrakhman,

parentsDavid M. Silfen, C’66, and Lyn G.

Silfen, parentsLaurence B. Simon, C’68, G’74,

parentDonald E. Smith, GR’56Leslie Hughes Smith, C’93, GED’95,

WG’02, and Gregory S. Jannetta, W’88, WG’94

Marshall S. Somers, C’74, WEV’86Mark Song, C’89Damon Soo Hoo, C’93Tracey Pearl Specter, C’84, and

Shanin Specter, L’84Jesse W. Spector, C’02Shane D. St. Hill, C’07Gladys Miller Stein, CW’53Karen M. Steinberg, G’95, GR’99,

and Paul SteinbergKarin M. Stellar, C’93Morisa S. Steuerman, C’96, and Scott

Michael Goldman, ENG’95Thomas W. Strauss, C’63Ann Hiestand Strong, C’83, L’88,

parentMalcolm H. Stull, C’55, parent

Stephen C. Sussman, C’62, L’65, and Sima E. Sussman, parents

William Keller Swalm, C’77, WG’81

Kenneth M. Tanzer, C’83, INT’91Benjamin D. Tauber, C’99Alan C. Thomas, C’81Lisa Thompson, C’87Richard M. Thune, C’69, parentReg D. Tigerman, C’07David Dallam Townsend, C’49,

and Nancy L. TownsendMichael H. Trenk, C’82, W’82George L. Van Amson in honor of

Carolyn FreelandMichael A. Viani, C’74Judith Nemez Vredenburgh, C’70,

parentLee S. Wasserman, C’75, and Judy

G. Wasserman, OT’76, parentsAlan S. Waxman, C’97David B. Weigle, W’69Richard G. Weiss, C’78Richard T. Welham, C’61Caroline Gittis Werther, C’83,

L’86, and Daniel Werther, parents, in honor of Ivan Shin

Joan Wendel Wiegand, CW’48, parent

Adrienne Weitzner Williams, C’84Paul C. Williams, W’67, parentAllison Wintner, C’86, W’86, and

Jeffrey Wintner, C’86Robert E. Wisniewski, W’75 G’08Jean Kessler Wolf, GFA’93, parentBruce A. Wolfson, C’74, L’77David Xingfa Xie, GR’94Mary-Knight B. Young, CGS’07Peter R. Young, GR’80Chang Hua Zou, WEV’99,

WMP’99

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Ronald Aaron, GR’61, parentJoseph Todd Abrams, GR’87, and

Brenda G. Abrams*William Acar, GR’83*John F. Adamson, GR’57, parentJudith A. Adamson, CW’71, and

Frederick D. Jackes, GR’72*Henry J. Adler, GR’93*Richard Adler, C’63, GR’69Ron Adner, G’98, GRW’98, and

Susan M. Hanson-Adner, GR’97Nilofer Nina Ahmad, GR’90Olugbemi Akinkoye, GR’76*Michelle P. Alberti-Billig, GED’84,

GR’89*James P. Alexander, Jr., G’80Lauren Bersh Alloy, CW’74, GR’79*Giselle L. Anatol, G’94, GR’98*R. Lanier Anderson, IV, G’93,

GR’93Lucy M. Anderson, GR’68*James Mortimer Andres, GR’01Dee E. Andrews, G’81, GR’86Mary Jane P. Androne, GR’77, and

Richard G. Androne, GR’78William E. Angerer, GR’98Anonymous (4)David W. Anthony, G’74, GR’85Radoslav D. Antonov, GR’99Ingrid Colette Arauco, G’83, GR’86*Terry S. Arbit, Esq., C’80, G’80Donald R. Arbuckle, GR’77*Richard C. Arden, GR’67Maria A. Argiriadi, GR’99David Clayton Arnett, GR’97Sadik Boragan Aruoba, G’02’ GR’04Carolyn H. Asbury, GR’82, and

Arthur K. Asbury, facultyA. N. Athanassakis, GR’65Gershun W. Avilez, GR’09*Maria Aysa-Lastra, G’02, GR’05*Sujuan Ba, GR’91*Marsha R. Baar, GR’81Jerald Graybill Bachman, GR’62

Bayard Badenhausen, C’42 GR’56, and Cintra Morgan Badenhausen, CW’49, parents

Osei A. Badu-Nkansah, G’81Ilene Freidus Bahr, G’70Frederick J. Bailey III, C’73 G’73B. Mitchell Baker, GR’75*Jennifer Jordan Baker, GR’00Sara C. Balderston, C’78, and John L.

Brooke, G’77 GR’82, parents*Catherine N. Ball, G’78, GR’91Judith Weinstein Balthazar, G’84,

GR’86, and Scott L. Balthazar, G’82, G’85

Frances Kirshner Barg, GR’00, and Stanley Barg, parents

*Alberta Gregg Barrett, GR’65Lida K. Barrett, GR’54*William M. Bass, GR’61*Peter M. Bauland, C’53 GR’64Susan Kaplan Becker, CW’68, GR’73,

WG’79Sybilla K. Beckmann-Kazez, GR’86Michael S. Bednar, C’82, and Elayne

A. Bornslaeger, GR’86John S. Beekley, Jr., G’59Bronwyn S. Beistle, GR’04*Gregory J. Bell, GR’01*Joshua D. Bellin, GR’95Anna S. Benjamin, CW’46, G’48,

GR’55Julie C. Benyo, C’78*Robert L. Bergbauer, G’84*Theodore A. Bergren, GR’88Gerald Berkowitz, GR’68*Gail I. Berlin, GR’85Richard B. Berner, GR’76Mark H. Bernstein, C’66, M’72,

GM’75, GR’78, and Sandra Berman Bernstein, NU’70, GNU’74

Penny L. Bernstein, CW’69, GR’78*John Bezis-Selfa, GR’95Samit K. Bhattacharya, GR’96*John E. Blair, GR’76

Jeffrey Alan Blakely, G’87, GR’90*Walter Gates Blenderman, GR’81James R. Bloomfield, GR’71*Bruce P. Boczar, GR’84, and Elisa

M. Winterstein, GR’86, parentsRita R. Boggs, GR’73Barbara Joan Bolgiano, GR’88Joseph J. Bolmarcich, GR’72, parentMichael R. W. Bommer, GR’71*Dorothy Villinger Borei, GR’77Gregory J. Borgstede, GR’04Brian H. Bornstein, G’87, GR’91*Doris Borthwick Heinemann, G’61*Laslo V. Boyd, GR’71Richard G. Branton, GR’70*Steven Kenneth Brierley, GR’82David R. Brigham, G’87, GR’92*Arthur A. Bright, GR’73Jeffrey P. Brosco, C’85, G’88, M’89,

GR’94Charles F. Brower, G’76, GR’87Stanley G. Brown, GR’66Dickson D. Bruce, Jr., GR’71*Margaret H. Bruno, CW’75, G’76,

and William A. Bruno, W’76, WG’77

James W. Buhler, GR’96Andrew G. Bunn, G’89, GR’93*David F. Burg, GR’69Gene Burns, G’84, GR’88*Robert N. Burrows, GR’59*Milton L. Butts, Jr., C’76, G’87,

GR’01John Cairns, Jr., G’49, GR’53Thomas A. Caldwell, C’66, GR’73Bruce William Callen, GR’88Evis Cama, GR’03Miriam Pitchon Camitta, CGS’71,

GED’72, GR’87*Albert P. Cardarelli, GR’74*Salvatore P. Carfagno, G’49*Edward K. Carpenter, G’58Paul Carranza, G’99, GR’05Beverly G. Carrier

Suchan Chae, GR’85 in memory of David Cass, faculty, parent and Lawrence E. Chaitkin, GR’74

David M. Chalikian, C’75, GR’81, M’84, and Joan P. Chalikian, GNU’81

Susan Maizel Chambre, GR’76*Sherry S. Chang, GR’74*Elaine S. Chapnick, G’62Hal S. Chase, GR’73Cheng Yueh Chen, GR’80*Edward I-Te Chen, GR’68Shao-Ping Chen, GR’86*Wenpeng Chen, GR’77, and Wei

Mei Ching, GR’77*Yin-Wong Cheung, GR’90, parentJocelyn Chu-Hsiang Chi, GR’70James R. Child, G’50Gloria Twine Chisum, GR’60,

HON’94, and Melvin J. Chisum, C’43, M’52

Samuel Choi, G’97, GR’97*Esther Chou Chow, GR’74, and

Peter K. Chow, ME’72, parentsVictoria Choy, GR’77James W. Christie III, GR’74George Thomas Cicila, GR’86, and

Soon J. Lee, GR’85*George S. Claghorn, GR’53*Jill Nadell Claster, G’59*John C. Clayton, GR’53Eugene P. Clemens, GR’70*Eric H. Cline, GR’91Horace H. Coburn, GR’56*Joseph D. Cohen, GR’71Rita Dershowitz Cohen, CW’73,

G’73, parentLynn H. Cohick, G’95, GR’96Margaret S. Coleman, G’49Ann Ryan Collins, GR’02Robert G. Collmer, GR’53Patricia A. Compagnone-Post, G’85,

and Albert J. Post, GCH’83, GR’85John L. Connolly, Jr., GR’74

The following individual donors are gratefully acknowledged for their 2010 - 2011 annual support of graduate fellowships in the School of Arts and Sciences.

penn artS anD ScienceS annUal giving

*Consecutive donor to the Graduate Fellowship Fund for three or more years.

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*Olga F. Connor, GR’80Benjamin Franklin Cooling, GR’69*Steven C. Corbato, GR’89*Pierce S. Corden, GR’71Saul A. Cornell, G’86, GR’89*Alan D. Craig, GR’61, and Eleanor

D. Craig, G’61Steven G. Craig, GR’81, and Janet E.

Kohlhase, GR’80Walter L. Cressler, III, GR’99Margaret S. Crocco, GR’76Timothy D. Cross, G’81, GED’81,

GR’83*Elizabeth A. Crowell, G’80, GR’83Simeon John Crowther, GR’70,

parent*James Cruise, GR’85Anne H. Cubilie, GR’95Ronald T. Curran, GR’69Derek Daniels, G’97 GR’01, and

Jennifer Daniels, L’99Michael J. Dantonio, GR’70*John F. Dashe, C’78, GR’88, M’89Sarah B. Daugherty, GR’73Anne I. Davenport, GR’80John A. Davison, GR’42John I. E. Day, GR’76*Michele S. De Cruz Saenz, GR’76C. Allen Dearry, GR’81Jane Degenhardt, GR’05*Joann Dellaneva, G’78Nancy G. Dellmuth, G’63*Joseph Deluca, G’86Salvador A. Demafeliz, G’83Elissa Miller Derrickson, GR’86, and

Kim C. Derrickson, GR’85Keith A. Deutsch, C’66, G’75, and

Susan McDonald Deutsch, CW’68Janice W. Dieter, GR’81*Laura White Dillon, G’77*Bruce I. Dittmar, GR’61Julie Rae Dobrow, ASC’84, GR’87*Vincent J. Doddy, G’76Mary K. Donaldson-Evans, GR’75,

and Lance K. Donaldson-Evans, faculty, parents

*Bryan E. Dowd, GR’82*Barry A. Dreikorn, GR’66Mark A. Druy, GR’81

Karen B. Dubno, G’63Angela L. Duckworth, G’03, GR’06,

and Jason DuckworthEllen Vogdes Dunn, C’87, and

Patrick J. Dunn, C’87, GR’95J. Thomas Dwyer, C’56, G’58, GR’67Jennifer V. Ebbeler, G’99, GR’01Cecil D. Eby, GR’58*John H. Eckfeldt, C’67, GR’75,

M’76, and Nancy Schultz*Marcia D. Edwards, G’65*Diane Parsont Ehrman, C’83, G’83Barry L. Eichler, GR’67, faculty,

parent*Howard M. Einspahr, GR’70*Ellen Miriam Eisenberg, GR’90Barrett A. Eisenstat, G’71Sylvan H. Eisman, C’50, G’51, parent*Kent E. Eklund, PhD, GR’73*Lynda Gehris Elmer, G’65Memery P. Elvin-Lewis, G’57*Michael A. Epting, GR’80, and

Susan P. Epting, GNU’78Elinor Felton Eugene, G’47Keelan Michael Evanini, GR’09George V. Fagan, GR’54*Daryl R. Fair, GR’65Kyle P. Farley, G’01, GR’06*Richard A. Farnum, Jr., GR’90*Mary Ellen Page Farr, GR’77Georges A. Fauriol, G’72, GR’81Catharine D. Faust, G’71, GR’75,

HON’08, and Charles E. Rosenberg, faculty

*Helen F. Faust, G’37*Roberta S. Favis, GR’74, and

Gregory R. Favis, M’71*Joseph J. Feeney, GR’71*Gail Steg Feldman, G’64*William Feldman, GR’55, and

Rhoda Litt Feldman, ED’51Maria Judith Feliciano, G’04, GR’04*Augustus M. Filbert, GR’62*Eugene J. Fine, G’71*Jeffrey M. Fischer, G’06Alan J. Fishbein, G’81, W’G81*James J. Fishman, C’64 G’65*Raymond E. Fitch, GR’65Irene Fizer, G’92, GR’96

Joel G. Flaks, GR’57, and J. Margot Hoffman Flaks

*Raymond D. Fogelson, GR’62Megan Foley, GR’08*Fred L. Forman, GR’69Donald W. Forsyth, GR’79*Gertrude Michel Forte, GR’64Claude R. Foster, Jr., GR’63Michael K. Foster, GR’74Stephen C. Foster, GR’73John R. Foulkes, G’71*Janet D. Fox, CW’70, GEN’72*Steven D. Fraade, GR’80Paul Frail, GR’07Catherine S. Frankel, GFA’90*Lawrence M. Frankel, G’91, L’92Elizabeth A. Frankenberg, GR’92*David O. Frantz, GR’68John B. Frantz, GR’61, parent*Laurence W. Fredrick, GR’59Alice F. Freed, CW’68, GR’76Richard M. Freeland, GR’69, parentLisa A. Freeman, C’87, G’91, GR’95*Terence M. Freeman, G’77, GR’85*Patrick J. Friel, GR’55*Charles A. Fritz III, G’68, and

Margaretha C. FritzEllen Cressman Frye, GR’98*Thomas M. Fullerton, Jr., GRW’88*Yves G. Gaden, G’73*Gregory John Gallo, GR’88*Kenneth N. Geller, GR’60*Erica C. Gelser, GR’08Henry A. Gemery, GR’67Lisa M. George, G’98, GRW’01, and

Glenn GeorgeLeanna C. Giancarlo, GR’96*Jon M. Gibney, G’71Stefanie C. Gilbert, G’87Susan E. Gill, CGS’76, GR’96*Angus Kress Gillespie, GR’75Maria P. Gindhart, G’95, GR’02*Carol M. D. Gisselquist, G’77*Barry M. Gittlen, GR’77David Colin Glahn, G’97, GR’00,

and Esther Liebowitz Glahn, NU’94Robin L. Glantz, C’76, G’76Lee Taylor Glen, G’80, GR’90Joseph Glicksberg, GR’03, and

Mahsa Parangi, L’96

David P. Gold, G’96, GR’02*Leonard S. Goldberg, G’76, GR’80Marc B. Goldfinger, GR’96*David J. Goldsmith, C’93, G’93Karen L. Goldstein, G’69, GR’77,

WG’82*Lester T. Goldstein, GR’76Richard Z. Goldstein, GR’66Sidney Goldstein, G’53, parentOsvaldo Noe Golijov, GR’91Marcel Alberto Gonzalez, GR’86*Kathryn Killian Gordon, G’62Paul Gordon, ED’55, GED’58, GR67Iza Goroff, GR’68*Thomas S. Goslin, II, GR’49Joan I. Gotwals, CW’56, GR’63Roger Grant, GR’10*Richard I. Grauch, GR’71*Susan Blair Green, G’67, GR’86Daniel A. Greenbaum, C’77, G’77Bradford T. Greene, GR’74Judith Kramer Greene, G’61, and

Robert W. Greene, GR’63Susan C. Greenfield, G’91, GR’91*John M. Greiner, G’73, parentHoward D. Greyber, GR’53John F. Griffin, C’66, GR’71*Judith B. Grinspan, GR’84*Julia Bordiga Grinstein, GR’96Allen W. Grove, G’93 GR’96*David H. Grubbs, GR’61*Bernard R. Grunstra, GR’63Maria-Luisa Guardiola, GR’89*Joan Marks Guest, GR’70, parent*Alfred B. Guion, G’70*Jane E. Gulick, GR’72Qinghua Guo, GR’04*Elissa Schagrin Guralnick, CW’69,

G’69, and Stanley M. Guralnick, C’65, GR’69

Richard V. Gutowski, C’69, GR’74Gerhard J. Haas, GR’52Julia Haas, GR’02*Peter Hagis, Jr., GR’59Babi Hammond, G’04, GR’10, and

Hilary A. Smith, G’04, GR’08Valerie Lynn Hansen, G’83, GR’87*William H. Hardesty, C’59, GR’70,

parent

*Consecutive donor to the Graduate Fellowship Fund for three or more years.

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Philip J. Hargis, Jr., GR’72*Richard R. Hark, GR’96Ira Harkavy, C’70, GR’79, and

Sandra Eglick Harkavy, CW’73, GM’82, parents

*Rebecca R. Harrison, G’82, GR’86Carol Stillman Hart, GR’79, and

Robert E. Stillman, G’76, GR’79Patrice Martau Hartnett, G’84,

GR’91Stephen P. Harvey, GR’98*Carla J. Hasenritter, G’60Sinclair Hatch, Jr., G’66*Steven J. Hausman, C’67, GR’72*David D. Heck, G’64*Mary L. Hediger, GR’85, and

George E. Weaver, C’64, GR’71*Edwin J. Heilweil, GR’84, and Toby

Zankel Heilweil, L’81*Lisa Jandorf Heller, C’79, G’79, and

Mark H. Heller, parents*William F. Helmer, GR’63Thomas J. Henley, G’50Donald M. Hensley, GR’63James N. J. Henwood, G’58, GR’75John F. Herber, Sr., GR’60*Patricia A. Herlihy, G’60, GR’63David John Herman, G’88, GR’92Joseph P. Herron, G’94Matthew H. Hersch, G’05, GR’10James C. Hess, GR’81*David S. Hessney, G’76, WG’78,

and Sharon Cohen Hessney, WG’78*Donald V. Hester, GR’73, and

Ingrid M. Hester, G’69, GR’81Michael Steven Heutmaker, GR’86*Ronald E. Hicks, GR’75*Judith B. Hodge, GR’72Peter T. Hoffer, GR’75John J. Hohwald, C’75, G’77Eric W. Holman, GR’64William F. Holmes, GR’60*Luba A. Holowaty, ED’53, GR’70*Melissa J. Homestead, G’87, GR’98*Paula Hong, GR’95*Lois Silver Horgan, CW’60, GR’72*David E. Horlacher, G’60Freya E. Hory, G’91, and William

Lee, C’79, GR’89

Howard La Hostrander, II, G’11Mary K. Howard, GR’63*Howard J. Howe, GR’74*James Howe, GR’74Pat C. Hoy, GR’79*Peter A. Hoyt, C’80, G’88, GR’99James M. Hughes, GR’69*Patrick Pakhim Hui, GR’96*Robert W. Hull, G’66*Robert D. Hulme, GR’59Richard A. Hunt, GR’73*Joseph E. Illick, GR’63*James Kevin Ingersent, GR’90, and

Lynn B. Osickey, C’85, GED’90, GED’99

*Annemarie LaRosa Inglis, GR’95*Vernon Leland Ingraham, GR’65*Lina N. Insana, GR’00*Judith T. Irvine, GR’73Natalie Kleinman Isser, CW’47,

GR’62*Susan B. Iwanisziw, G’91, GR’94John S. Jacoby, G’75, and Carolyn S.

Jacoby, parentsDiann L. Jacox, G’76*Pieter F. Jacques, GR’74Sonia C. Jaipaul, C’76, G’76, and

Charles H. Wardlaw, CHE’75, parents

Donald W. Jarrell, GR’68, and Joanne S. Jarrell, parents

Jong-Dii Jiang, GR’86Shenjun Jiang, G’93, GR’96, GEN’99Zhiren Jin, GR’90Domingo C. Joaquin, GR’86Richard Barney Johnson, G’42,

GR’48Alois J. Johnston, GR’81Paul F. Johnston, GR’81Christopher Jones, G’63, GR’69,

parentElise F. Jones, G’69, GR’79, and J.

Parry JonesJacqueline A. Jones, GR’74Gregory Nisi Jonsson, G’77*Shee Lup Jung, GR’52Riva Eichner Kahn, GR’81, and Marc

KahnRoberta Kahn, GR’86

James W. Kalat, GR’71Chih Min Kam, GR’74*Richard B. Kaner, GR’84Yoonyoung Kang, GR’97*Debra L. Kaplan, GR’77, parentDiane Rosenberg Karp, CW’69,

GR’82*Alan L. Karras, G’86, GR’88Frank F. Katz, GR’56*Jill Citron Katz, GR’00Solomon H. Katz, GR’67, faculty,

and Pauline A. CandauxJames W. Kaufer, GR’82*Catherine C. Keane, G’96, GR’99*Lawrence S. Kegeles, GR’74Robert L. Keighton, GR’61*David H. Kelly, GR’58Mary E. Kelly, G’72John C. Kemp, GR’75Stanley J. Kemp, GR’04*Leslie Brown Kessler, GR’92Daniel P. Kiehart, C’73, GR’79Anne Draffkorn Kilmer, GR’59Unkyu Kim, C’86, GR’96, parent*Wilson H. Kimnach, GR’71*Bonnie M. Kind, GR’67*Curtis S. King, G’92, GR’99Jason A. Kirk, GR’05*Nancy G. Klavans, G’90, and

Richard A. Klavans, GR’89*Roberta S. Klein, G’75, GR’99*Michael J. Kletter, GR’83Barbara Barrett Kling, GR’87Doris M. Kling, GR’93*Dennis M. Klinman, M’80, GR’82Douglas M. Knawby, GR’96*Charles A. Knight, GR’64Eon-Suk Ko, GR’02Rebecca Amy Kobrin, G’95, GED’00,

GR’02Arcadia X. Kocybala, GR’78Hideyo Konagaya, GR’07Benjamin M. Korstvedt, GR’95Reynold J. Koslowski, GR’94Andrea Kosslowski-Klee, GR’95*Zlata Kovac, GR’64*Maria Kovacs, GR’71*Karel Debra Kovnat, GED’81,

GR’87

*Ellen A. Kramarow, G’87, GR’92*George M. Kramer, GR’57, parentEileen E. Kraus, G’83, WG’83, GR’90Barry A. Krisberg, C’67, GR’71Robert E. Krisch, C’56, GR’64, and

Patricia L. KrischJulie-Francoise Kruidenier, G’06,

GR’09*Beryl M. Kuhn, GR’68*William W. Kuhn, GR’71William Kung, G’02, GR’04Lenore R. Kupperstein, CW’63,

G’65, GR’79Ina Ruth Kutz-Sarin Beck, G’95Sylvia D. Kuzmak, G’79*Robert G. Kyrka, GR’76, V’80Claude William La Salle, GR’64Gari Laguardia, GR’75*Krishna Lahiri, GR’79*Salvatore J. Lalama, GR’80*Beth Ann Lange, G’71, and Gregg

A. Lange*Joseph A. Lannon, GR’66Robert J. Laskowski, C’74, M’78,

WG’83, and Kathleen F. LaskowskiFinn Laursen, GR’80G. Arthur Lavelle, GR’51Stephen Leach, G’75*Henriette Horchler Leanos, GR’68Nicole Leapley, G’00, GR’03*Lyman L. Leathers, GR’63*Alan J. Lee, G’80, GR’91*Cheryl M. Lee, GGS’02*Chuan Kuo Lee, GR’70*Ru-Ying Lee, GR’72, parent*Robert F. Leeman, G’02, GR’05Robert G. Leh, GR’64Nelson J. Leidner, Jr., G’71*Gary L. Leiser, GR’76*Audrianne Blitz Levene, G’64, and

Martin L. Levene, ME’54, GME’58, parents

Gail Slayton Levin, GR’74, and Mark J. Levin, GR’74

*Katherine Levin, G’90, GR’95, and Robin M. Shapiro

*Norman H. Levine, C’71, G’71*Theresa J. Li, G’78Weiye Li, GR’84, and Xin Ru Liu,

GR’85

penn artS anD ScienceS annUal giving

*Consecutive donor to the Graduate Fellowship Fund for three or more years.

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*Anna Katz Lieblich, GR’73, and Jeffrey M. Lieblich, M’72

Jeehyun Lim, GR’10Charles A. Lindquist, GR’69William G. Lindsay, Jr., GR’62, and

Barbara Hill Lindsay, SW’56Walter Lobunez, GR’54Jakob R. Loewenberg, GR’55, parentFrank D. Love, C’91, G’04*Mary Lorette Lowe, GR’86*Derek I. Lowenstein, GR’69*Edward D. Lowry, G’69*Bruce J. Lutz, GR’72*Suzanne P. Macaulay, GR’92*John J. Mack, Jr., C’79, G’79*Raphael John MacWilliams, G’53*Steven F. Maier, GR’68Donald R. Makosky, GR’66*Marilyn V. Malone, CW’69,

GED’70, G’72Annette T. Markham, CGS’69, and

Walter G. Markham, GR’72Susan Marks, GR’03*James L. Marshall, G’64, and

Barbara S. Marshall, GED’73*Philip R. Marshall, GR’69Terrell Marshall, Jr., GRE’69*Timothy P. Martin, G’77, GR’81Wallace S. Martindale, GR’58, and

Henrietta H. Martindale, FA’56Holman C. Massey, Jr., GR’95 in

memory of John Cebra, C’55, faculty, parent, and William Telfer, faculty

*Michael K. Matthews, GR’76*George L. Mauger, Jr., G’60Rebecca R. McBride, GR’75John A. McCauley, GR’96Vince A. McDermott, G’94Joseph A. McFalls, Jr., GR’77, parent*David B. McGrail, GR’71*Anne C. McGrath, G’90Mr. and Mrs. Thomas McKay, IIIChristopher C. Mead, G’78, GR’86Karen E. Meadow, CW’61, and

Norman D. Meadow, C’59, GR’67Leslie B. Mechanic, GR’75Rosalind S. Medoff, G’71Herminia Q. Menez, GR’73

Marilyn Wilkey Merritt, GR’76*Clemence Ravacon Mershon, G’70*Mary Ann D. Meyers, GR’76,

parentYuanjun Miao, GR’95Donald B. Miles, GR’85 in honor of

Art Dunham, faculty*David S. Miller, C’80, G’81, RES’92*Jane E. Miller, G’86, GR’89Judith B. Miller, CW’64, GR’72*Richard A. Miller, GR’61*William R. Miller, GR’74*Frederick V. Mills, Sr., GR’67*Gail Minault, GR’72Viorel M. Minda, GR’80, parent*Thomas Jay Misa, G’83, GR’87Maxine L. Miska, G’73, GR’90*Peter V. Moak, GR’70Janet M. Monge, GR’80, Faculty*R. Peter Mooz, GR’70Michael J. Moran, GR’78John H. Morrow, Jr., GR’71*Robert L. Mortenson, C’59, GR’64,

and Ruth Yakes Mortenson, ED’60, G’61

Iris Jill Moscovitch, GR’75, and Morris Moscovitch, GR’72

Norman Moskowitz, GR’51Pradip Kumar Muhuri, G’86, GR’91Frank H. Mullen, G’61Barbara A. Munjas, GR’72*Jane G. Murphy, GR’80, and

Michael A. MurphyWilliam M. Murray, GR’82Ann V. Myers, G’67, GR’74Ronald E. Myers, GRS’83, GR’89,

and Cynthia Bergman Myers*Jack Nagel, facultyJohn Nagy, GR’74Nirmala N. Naidoo, GR’94Letitia Rose Naigles, G’84, GR’88

in memory of Jane Beattie, G’84, GR’88

Edward P. H. Nash, G’91, WG’91Margaret A. Nasta, GR’71*Paul M. Nealen, GR’00H. Viscount Nelson, Jr., G’62, GR’69*Carol L. Neuman de Vegvar, GR’81Nigel James Nicholson, G’92, GR’94

*Patricia Steele Nielsen, G’84Robert J. J. Nisbet, GR’99*Charles E. A. Noad, GR’73*Rita Diane Nolan, GR’65Robert B. Noland, G’86, GR’92 in

memory of Stephen Feldman, faculty

Alex Novikoff, G’04, GR’07*David E. Oberlin, G’50Barbara M. O’Brien, CW’58, and

Paul J. O’Brien, GR’60Erin M. O’Brien, GR’07Virginia A. O’Connell, G’91, GR’01Edward M. O’Flaherty, GR’79*Clifton C. Olds, GR’66*Susan P. Oleksiw, GR’77Stacie Olson, GR’96*John A. O’Malley, GR’63, and Mary

E. O’MalleyFrancis Onyango, GR’07 in honor of

Roselyne Aori*Michael Ossar, GR’73*Terry S. Overton, WG’68, GR’73Nesrin Ozoren, GR’02Michael E. Palmer, G’62, and

Michele Winitsky Palmer, CW’63Roumyana I. Pancheva-Izvorski,

GR’00 in memory of Penka Pancheva

*Nancy Abbolone Panepinto, G’74, and Paul P. Panepinto

William H. Panning, GR’74George S. Pappas, GR’74, parentRichard R. Pardi, GR’83*Kenneth W. Parker, GR’83*Robert T. Parry, GR’67, and Brenda

L. ParryJudith Marie Pascoe, GR’92, parent*Eric S. Pasternack, GR’78Robert G. Patterson, GR’94*Charles Paturick, G’65*John E. Pawlowski, GR’93Brian L. Peasnall, G’92, GR’00,

CGS’02*Frederick R. Peiffer, GR’79, and

Karen Spitulnik Peiffer, G’72, GR’94Jeffrey C. Pelletier, GR’85*Arthur L. Penn, GR’76, and Lynn S.

Penn, CW’66

Cherng-Tiao Perng, GEN’03, GR’05Bruce Millard Perry, GR’95*Douglas E. Peterson, D’72, GR’76Anne O. Pfister, GR’74*Geraldine M. Phipps, ED’60, GR’71*Nathaniel M. Pigman, Jr., G’49*George R. Pitts, GR’77*David J. Pivar, GR’65Tamara Renee Plaut, GR’78*Nadine Nicole Pobjecky, GR’88*Jessie J. Poesch, GR’66Karsten Pohl, GR’97Alan W. Pollack, GR’77Sidney Pollack, GR’70*Jennifer J. Popiel, G’96, GR’00*David L. Portigal, GR’67*Henry E. Prescott, Jr., GR’66*Geoffrey L. Price, GR’81*Jerold H. Price, GR’75Richard G. Priest, GR’72Letitia O. Principato, CW’49,

GED’76, GGS’99, and Eugene R. Principato, GM’50, parents

*Susan Hymes Pross, GR’75, and Ronald Michael Pross, D’74, parent

Walter Frank Prusak, WG’81, G’86, parent

*David E. Purdy, GR’82*Randolph Pyle, G’67*Kenneth L. Pyne, G’69Jining Qi, GR’95*Zhenchao Qian, G’92, GR’94Clifton P. Quinn, GR’74, parent*Edyce Solomon Rau, CW’75 G’75Peter Shedd Reed, G’83 GR’89*Julie M. Reich, GR’68Peter Reiss, G’74, and Margaret P.

Wilder, GR’80Mary E. Reuder, GR’51, parentSean Rhoads, G’10William L. Rice, GR’68*James C. Riordan, G’56Paul C. Rissman, C’78, GR’85Ralph Anthony Rivero, GR’87Jean Ellis Robertson, CW’71, G’73,

GR’83, and Craig M. McDaniel, W’70

James G. Robinson, G’74, GR’88

*Consecutive donor to the Graduate Fellowship Fund for three or more years.

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*Kenneth M. Roemer, GR’71*N. Bruce Rogers, C’62, G’63Janet L. Roitman, GR’96*Diane L. Roland, G’57*Robert A. Roosa, GR’57, parentClayton S. Rose, G’05, GR’07Mitchel D. Rose, GR’72*Patricia L. Rose, G’75Martin I. Rosenberg, GR’79*Harold S. Rosenbluth, C’47, L’50,

and Frances Baylinson Rosenbluth, ED’48

*Diana S. Rosenstein, G’81, GR’92John J. Rosowski, CGS’73, GR’79*George A. Ross, G’71Brian Rouleau, GR’10Paul Rowe, GR’09*R. Christine Royer, G’50*Rita G. Rubin, G’69, and Robert A.

Rubin, GR’71*Christopher B. Ruff, GR’81*Bruce Anthony Ruggeri, GR’89Ruth R. Russell, G’86Kathleen Ryan, G’86, GR’04Maria del Pilar Ryan, G’97, GR’03Tagi Sagafi-Nejad, G’71, GR’79Hector Salazar, G’89, GR’91*G. Kenneth Sams, GR’71Mariano Sana, G’98, GR’03*Diane Zubrow Sand, GR’72, and

Michael A. Sand, C’63, L’66, parents

David I. Sandler, G’70Marian Sandmaier, CW’71, and

Daniel A. Sipe, C’70, GR’81Betty Ruth Hursh Sapir, GR’77Sue Williams Saul, GED’51 in

memory of George B. Saul, II, C’49, GR’54, G’60

*Alia Sayegh, GED’65, GR’74, parent*Don L. Scarborough, GR’70Jeffrey Scarborough, G’02, GR’05*David E. Scheirer, GR’53*Carol Ann Scheppard, GR’97Ernest W. Scherzer, G’60Corinna Schlombs, G’04, GR’10*William R. Schmalstieg, GR’56Albert J. Schmidt, GR’53*Jerome E. Schnee, GR’70

David S. Schoenhaut, GR’89Jeffrey S. Schoenwald, GR’73Utsav Arnout Schurmans, GR’08*Donald N. Scofield, G’55Jeri A. Sechzer, GR’62, parent*Mark F. Sejnowski, G’76*Vicki L. Seyfert-Margolis, GR’90,

and James Margolis*Carole M. Shaffer-Koros, GR’73*Hsi-Ping Shao, GR’76Harold I. Sharlin, GR’58*Julia L. Shear, GR’01*Helen E. Sheehan, G’75, GR’83Allen G. Shepherd, GR’65Richard Mylius Sherman, G’62,

GR’69, WG’78*Robin M. Sherwood, GR’02Ie-Ming Shih, GR’93Kenneth E. Shilling, G’76George J. Shotzbarger, G’75, L’78,

and Patricia W. Shotzbarger, C’81Hedvah Lang Shuchman, CW’52,

G’54 in memory of Philip Shuchman, L’53, G’59

Charles A. Signorino, GR’59Bernice Frank Silk, CW’58, and Jules

Silk, W’49, L’52, parents, in honor of Gloria Twine Chisum, GR’60, HON’94

*Regene Henriette Silver, G’89, GR’90

*Tobianne Simmons, GR’70*Robert L. Simon, GR’69*Kenneth D. Singer, GR’81, and

Marcia J. Wexberg, L’79, parentsChristine W. Sizemore, G’68, GR’72Marilyn Craft Slivka, G’68, and

Ronald T. Slivka, GR’70*Kathryn E. Slott, CW’70, G’72,

GR’80*Jan E. G. Smit, G’51Benjamin Thomas Smith, GR’00*Donald E. Smith, GR’56*James A. Smith, GR’74Janet C. Smith, GR’87Riggs Alden Smith, GR’90*Shirley J. Smith, GR’75*W. A. Sam Smith, GR’56*Charles T. Snowdon, GR’68

*Lee L. Snyder, GR’69Marvin Moshe Z. Sokol, GR’80Lesley Lerner Solomon, CW’63,

G’73, GR’81Ker-Jar Song, GR’89Lingfeng Song, GR’91*Young-Dahl Song, GR’67, parent*Ronald H. Southerland, GR’70Stephen D. Spangehl, GR’72*Edward J. Spanier, GR’64Roderick S. Speer, GR’74*Grace Marmor Spruch, G’49, and

Larry Spruch, GR’48Barry F. Stein, C’59, GR’65, parent*Clarence B. Steinberg, GR’69Werner D. Steiner, GR’64*David Steinmuller, GR’61William F. Steirer, Jr., GR’72Jiri Stejskal, PhD, CGS’91, GR’98*George S. F. Stephans, C’76, GR’82Amy R. Stern, G’80Norman A. Stillman, C’67, GR’70*George J. Stockburger, GR’55Annette D. Stoddard-Freeman, G’39*Kenneth R. Strahs, GR’75, parent*Anne Marie Stratos, G’84Ione Apfelbaum Strauss, CW’54,

parent, in honor of Rebecca Bushnell, faculty

Bertram L. Strieb, C’59, G’61, and Lynne Yermanock Strieb, CW’61

Joseph W. Strzalka, GR’00*Stephen P. Stuempfle, GR’90*Jeffrey L. Sturchio, GR’81, and

Rebecca G. Sturchio, CW’74Kai Su, GR’93*Andrew G. Suozzo, Jr., GR’73*Robert G. Sutterley, G’96, G’00*Howard A. Swain, Jr., GR’60*George A. Swartz, GR’58, and Muriel Swartz*John William Sweet, Jr., GR’89*Melody Troeger Sweet, GR’85, and

Timothy P. Sweet, D’85*Harvey Sweetbaum, GR’60*Marie-Odile G. Sweetser, GR’57*Lillian G. Szklarczyk, GR’61Harunori Takeda, GR’78*E. Page Talbott, G’76, GR’80

*Jeffrey D. Tang, G’99, GR’04Joyce Wai Har Tang, GR’91*Joseph Tatta, G’57*Carol Maree Taylor, GR’93M. Kathryn Taylor, G’75*Thomas A. Tedesco, GR’69*John George Terino, C’86, G’91,

GR’01, and Susan Fitzgerald Terino, C’86

*George Tessler, GR’64*Marcia Smith Thessin, G’70Richard H. Thibedeau, G’67*Dwight R. Thomas, GR’78Max Warner Thomas, GR’93*Ralph B. Thomas, GR’71Susan Thomas, G’75, GR’87, CGS’02Jennifer S. Thompson, GR’02Victoria E. Thompson, GR’93*Ralph R. Thornton, GR’66Melissa Buck Tice, GR’88Peter Tkaczuk, GR’80, and Diane M.

Ward, C’79Jennifer Lynn Tobin, GR’91Mark J. Tollin, G’76Thomas M. Toth, G’77Renee T. Tribert, GFA’88Rocco P. Triolo, GR’59Linda V. Troost, G’80, GR’85T. J. Trout, Jr., GR’85Sze Kai J. Tsui, GR’75*Robert S. Turner, GRP’77, GR’83,

and Amy Karen Wolfe, C’77, GRP’80, GR’86

*John F. Tweedie, G’62*Harold L. Twiss, Jr., G’55Jennifer K. Uleman, G’90, GR’95*Linda A. Valleroy, G’78, GR’87Mary M. Vanhouten, GR’92Rohit Daniel Wadhwani, GR’02Royce E. Walters, GR’74*Richard Y. Wang, GR’70*Timothy F. Waples, GR’96*Michael T. Ward, G’78, GR’86Carolyn E. Ware, GR’94*Tom M. Warms, GR’88, and Beth

L. WarmsKhizar Wasti, GR’76Masakazu Watanuki, G’89, GR’98Gregory Robert Wegner, GR’87

penn artS anD ScienceS annUal giving

*Consecutive donor to the Graduate Fellowship Fund for three or more years.

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Tasheng Wei, GR’76, parentM. Marta Weigle, GR’71*David B. Weinstein, GR’70, and

Elsa Cohen Weinstein, GR’71*Eugene V. Weinstock, GR’57*Lenore Chava Weissler, GR’82*Fred R. Wentzel, G’59*Richard D. Werbeck, GR’73Charles F. Westoff, GR’53Margaret Jenkel White, G’41*Patricia Taylor White, G’94, GR’98*Sammis B. White, GCP’67, GR’71,

and Jean M. White, GFA’69*Margaret Michael Whittaker, G’64,

and Richard P. Whittaker, C’62, M’66, RES’71, parents

Robert C. Whitton, GR’72Thomas W. Wideman, GR’97*Daniel G. Williams, GR’80Richmond D. Williams, GR’59

Robin Brentwood Williams, G’90, GR’93

*Sarah Andersen Willig, GR’88Douglas R. Wilmes, GR’76*Grace Geoghegan Wilson, G’73,

GR’80Nathan Glenn Wimer, GR’94Joan Dowell Winship, G’70*Margaret E. Winters, GR’75*Thomas D. Winters, G’77, GR’86,

and Roberta L. Winters, GRD’80*Eliot Wirshbo, GR’76Charles D. Wise, GR’64*Robert P. Withington, Jr., GR’76Todd E. Woerner, GR’84George D. Wolf, GR’64*Edward L. Wolfe, C’54, GR’68*John R. Wolfe, GR’79Sarah Miles Woods, G’46*Joseph W. Wu, GR’72, parent

*David Xingfa Xie, GR’94*Samuel P. Yamin, GR’66Chin Ming Yang, GR’76, and Nancy

Chen Yang, GMT’75Carla Yanni, GR’94*Elsie Lankford Yeates, G’46Helen L. Yeh, GR’76, and James T. C.

Yeh, GR’75, parents*Amy M. Yerkes, GR’01Doris E. Yocum, CGS’59, GR’78*Glenn E. Yocum, GR’76Bonnie L. Youngs, G’88, GR’94*Eui Young Yu, GR’69Tsing Yuan, GR’69*Laura L. Zaika, GR’64*Carlos R. Zapata, GR’86Olga Zaslavsky, G’88, GR’95*Steven M. Zdatny, GR’82*Alexander Zemtsov, G’82Leila C. Zenderland, G’74, GR’86

*Regina Zibuck, GR’86*Susan Zimicki, G’98, GR’98*Robert E. Zipkin, GR’84Minna Pearl Ziskind, G’97, GR’01Stephen R. Zoloth, GR’74William L. Zwiebel, GR’68

This list is based on all gifts received between July 1, 2010 and June 30, 2011.  While the School of Arts and Sciences has made every effort to ensure the accuracy of this listing, we would appreciate you notifying the Office of External Affairs of any errors or omissions by emailing Elisavel Aleman at [email protected]

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*Consecutive donor to the Graduate Fellowship Fund for three or more years.

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David M. Silfen, C’66, parent Overseer Board Chair Chairman Mayfair Management Co., Inc.

David C. Abrams, C’83, parent Managing Member Abrams Capital, LLC Boston, MA

Ron Allen, C’79, G’79 News Correspondent NBC News New York Bureau

Jonathan M. Avnet, C’71, parent Producer, Director Brooklyn Films

Mitchell J. Blutt, M.D., C’78, M’82, WG’87 Chief Executive Officer Consonance Capital

David M. Brush, C’82, parent Independent Consultant and Former Head of RREEF Real Estate in Europe Deutsche Bank AG

Christopher J. Carrera, C’88 President Carrera-Willowbridge Capital, LLC

Kunho Cho, C’75, parent Chairman, Asia Millennium Management LLC

William J. Constantine, C’66, WG’68, parent Managing Director Legg Mason Investment Counsel

Lori Rutman Fife, Esq. , C’80, parent Partner Weil, Gotshal & Manges, LLP

Sarah W. Fuller, CW’71, parent President Decision Resources, Inc.

Fritzi Kolker Hallock, C’83, W’83 Principal, CIO Arundel Lumber Company, Inc.

Alan G. Hassenfeld, C’70 Chairman Hassenfeld Family Initiatives

James C. Johnson, Esq., C’74, L’77 General Counsel Loop Capital

Cathy Lasry, parent New York, NY

Richard F. Lee, Gr’86, parent CEO & Managing Partner Lee International Corporation

Marc F. McMorris, C’90, WG’94 Managing Director General Atlantic Partners, LLC

Steven A. Nichtberger, M.D., C’83, W’83 President and Chief Executive Officer Tengion, Inc.

Dhananjay M. Pai, W’83, parent Chief Operating Officer & Chief Financial Officer P. Schoenfeld Asset Managment

Dalip Pathak, WG’78, parent Managing Director Warburg Pincus International, LLC

James N. Perry, Jr., C’82 Managing Director Madison Dearborn Partners, Inc.

Michael J. Price, W’79 Sr. Managing Director Evercore Partners, Inc.

Lorraine Carrady Quinn CW’73, parent Vice President, Real Estate Carribean Cinemas

Mark H. Rachesky, M.D., C’81 Founder and President MHR Fund Management, LLC

John R. Reinsberg, C’78, parent Deputy Chairman Lazard Asset Management

Gary D. Rose, C’67, parent Retired Partner Goldman Sachs & Co.

Amy Bright Ruben, C’82 New York, NY 

Susan Small Savitsky, CW’75, parent Bethesda, MD

Julie Breier Seaman, C’86, parent Associate Professor Emory University School of Law

Rajiv Sobti, Gr’84, parent Chief Investment Officer Nomura Global Alpha LLC

David J. Teece, Gr’75, parent Chairman LECG

Alan Waxman, C’97 Head Texas Pacific Group

David B. Weigle, W’69 President Swan Engineering & Machine Company

Paul C. Williams, W’67, parent Managing Director Nuveen Investments

Dick Wolf, C’69, parent President & Executive Producer Wolf Films, Inc.

EMERITUSPaul K. Kelly, C’62, WG’64, parent President and Chief Executive Officer Knox & Co.

EX-OFFICIOPhilip M. Darivoff, W’79, WG’85, parent (Chairman, Center for Advanced Judaic Studies Board) Managing Director Office of Alumni Relations Goldman Sachs & Co.

BoarD of overSeerS (as of July 2011)

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School of artS anD ScienceS aDMiniStration (as of July 2011)

Dr. Rebecca W. BushnellDean of the School of Arts and SciencesThomas S. Gates, Jr. Professor and Professor of English Dr. Dennis DeTurckDean of the College of Arts and SciencesRobert A. Fox Leadership Professor and Professor of Mathematics

Dr. Jeffrey KallbergAssociate Dean for Arts and LettersProfessor of Music Dr. Susan LindeeAssociate Dean for the Social SciencesProfessor of History and Sociology of Science

Dr. Ralph M. RosenAssociate Dean for Graduate StudiesRose Family Endowed Term Professor and Professor of Classical Studies Dr. Richard M. SchultzAssociate Dean for the Natural SciencesCharles and William L. Day Distinguished Professor of Biology

Ms. Jean-Marie KneeleyVice Dean for External Affairs

Ms. Nora LewisVice Dean for Professional and Continuing Education

Mr. Ramin SedehiVice Dean for Finance and Administration

Ms. Allison RoseAssistant Dean

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Office of the Dean116 College HallPhiladelphia, PA 19104-6377

www.sas.upenn.edu

2010-11